Schnittke once stated that the music of Alban Berg was dearest to him "above all others'." So when the Alban Berg Foundation commissioned Schnittke in 1985 to write a work celebrating Berg's centenary, it was bound to be an especially personal work for the composer. But the sad, deeply introspective String Trio which materialized also marked a kind of memorial for Schnittke's own life. The work is a tribute to one of the composer's "primal scenes," as Freud called them -- formative, often traumatic moments in childhood which inscribe themselves deep in the consciousness. For Schnittke, that primal scene was a three-year stay in Vienna from 1946 to 1948, when the composer was in his early teens. Along with the the sight of the bombed-out State Opera and the scene in Everyman in which Death himself appears, Schnittke recalled "a certain Mozart-Schubert sound which I carried around for years." Within the darkness of post-World War II Vienna, the now bombed-out cultural center where classicism and the Enlightenment had reached their pinnacles, Schnittke must have experienced this Mozart-Schubert sound with a kind of built-in irony -- not the sneering irony of a skeptic, but one infused with compassion. Schnittke used this Mozart-Schubert sound again and again in his works, though seldom with the completeness and intensity realized in the String Trio. Cast in two large movements, the entire work flows from a simple, six-note cadential figure straight out of a Schubert piano sonata. Freud remarks that the individual constantly returns to the "primal scene" in an imaginary space, constantly replays the scene, tries new if ineffectual solutions. In the wandering, pathologically restless opening Moderato, Schnittke seems to enact such a scenario. When the movement begins, the "Schubert" figure has already aged; it carries the weight of two centuries on its weary back and fails to actually achieve its cadence. The entire Moderato makes an obsession of this opening figure; it starts, halts, starts again, stammers in spaces tonal and atonal, fast and slow, confessional and clamorous. New, derivative themes splinter off, old ones become crushed under the attempted recovery of ultimately illusory repose. Twice, a fantastical Valkryian gallop rends the musical fabric. The movement resolves through exhaustion, spinning from the opening cadential figure a hobbled three-part minuet. The following Adagio offers a peculiar response to the scenes of failure in the first movement. It presents no new material, but rather an alienated, reconfigured view of the opening, as if removed in both space and time. Things are slower, sparser, and more reflective. Dirge-like chorales of Russian character mix with a late Romantic lyricism; individual instruments sing out longer lines, now as laments rather than attempts. At the moment of utmost interiority, the wild gallop returns with previously unheard fury. After this final cathartic seizure, Schnittke again returns to the opening cadential figure, this time in canon above an oscillating bass. The concluding minuet from the Moderato also returns, but with a new clarity; its newly poignant nature has changed from that of a wound to that of a replica, a museum model. But the imagination, even at the extremes of its limits, still houses only images, and so this last vision sublimates into thin air. From allmusic.com
@samuelwnovak8 жыл бұрын
This just changed my life.
@chanteur14847 жыл бұрын
Around 30years ago I listened this trio performed by yoyo ma, choryang linn, Pinkas Jukerman. It was a live concert recording broadcasted by a Korean FM radio..I recorded it into a cassette tape, and listened over hundred times. Now I don't have the tape but being happy to listen to it again...thanks
@based_yeoman91387 жыл бұрын
What a fascinating piece. I listened to a performance of this trio yesterday morning, and I can't stop thinking about it.
@gerardbegni28067 жыл бұрын
Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet, Mstislav Rostropovich associated to play this trio by Schnittke .... a very interetsing recording !!!! Splendid. Note from a technical point of view that writing for string trio is difficult and raises many compositional concerns. Schnittke wrote an excellent score.
@ComposerInUK8 жыл бұрын
A kind of magic all its own. Polystylism and a wonderful sense of space and texture. Thank you so much for posing.
@balthasarb.52828 жыл бұрын
ComposerInUK You know his third string quartet? It's fantastic
@ComposerInUK8 жыл бұрын
Benjamin G. I do. And it is! Thank you for pointing me in the right direction :)
@willcwhite4 жыл бұрын
One of the last pieces he composed before he died (the first time)
@DanielAlvarezVeizaga Жыл бұрын
Amazing performance! Last canon with the bass pedal is overwhelming
@CarlosAugustoScalassaraPrando7 жыл бұрын
"Gidon Kremer, Yuri Bashmet, Mstislav Rostropovich" Holy Shit, what an amazing trio... :o :o :o
@TariqKhan-np2wx4 жыл бұрын
stunning piece. One of Schnittke's best. I have to say that the subsequent version he made for trio sounds even better.
@paulamrod5376 жыл бұрын
Just love this alternative to dodecaphony.
@louchesimon3 жыл бұрын
C'est magnifique, merci
@eduardorabelo56423 ай бұрын
in love with the Adagio, kinda reminds me of Shostakovich
@stueystuey19626 жыл бұрын
whatever it is stylistically, it's amazing, easy to listen to, pretty darn tootin good; to be sure i wasn't tripping i listened to this version after listening to a more obscure version - yup they're both really wack sonically. gorgeous.
@ha3vy4 жыл бұрын
Easily late 20th century's most important composer
@chris_karina4 жыл бұрын
4:28 epic style activated
@giovannismartini4798 жыл бұрын
This is my Schnittke ! ;) 22:53
@machida51143 жыл бұрын
quite good ...
@Viscamo5 жыл бұрын
GENIUS!!!!
@redblackmario8 жыл бұрын
Powerful.
@musicalmarion3 жыл бұрын
~~ Happy Birthday To You ~~
@simaanhabib26387 жыл бұрын
wow!!
@splatproductions993 жыл бұрын
2:02 4:26 5:42 6:43 7:31
@cicakbg8 жыл бұрын
14:14
@AP-fo2cr4 жыл бұрын
II 14:14
@kuang-licheng4028 жыл бұрын
nice
@tesahe40357 жыл бұрын
Schnittke has some good pieces, but sometimes I find his polystylism not interesting, but very tasteless. Too many styles at once.
@prckrevofficialchannel19117 жыл бұрын
Yes I find too, I like his later pieces more. I find them more mature in some ways, like the 8th symphony.
@ArturKorotin7 жыл бұрын
Well, some of the pieces, like his 1st Symphony, were never meant to be performed. It was by the enthusiasm of the other composers and some luck that it was ever put on stage. One could say that many of his pieces weren't really designed for any audience.
@torterrakart72496 жыл бұрын
Artur Korotin In what sense do you mean that? I'm just curious to learn more about Schnittke
@IskalkaQuest20106 жыл бұрын
What then might they have been designed for???
@sergebouchard62225 жыл бұрын
IskalkaQuest2010 Maybe just for the pleasure to express oneself?