
Sowerby - Bacon: Trios from the City of Big Shoulders / Lincoln Trio
The twice-Grammy-nominated Lincoln Trio â violinist DesirĂ©e Ruhstrat, cellist David Cunliffe, and pianist Marta Aznavoorian â offers engaging, rarely heard piano trios by 20th-century Chicago composers Leo Sowerby, winner of the Rome Prize and Pulitzer Prize for music, and Ernst Bacon, recipient of three Guggenheim Fellowships and a Pulitzer Fellowship. Baconâs Trio No. 2 for Violin, Cello and Piano (1987) receives its world-premiere recording. Hailed by The New York Times as âa Composer Known for Echoing America,â Bacon infuses his six-movement trio with American influences including marches, folksong-like melodies, and jazz rhythms, validating Virgil Thomsonâs assessment of Baconâs music as âfull of melody and variety; honest and skillful and beautiful.â Sowerbyâs Trio for violin, violincello and pianoforte (1953) is âa work of tremendous integrityâ that exhibits an âimposing structure, contrapuntal gymnastics, and a concern for instruments sounding as good as they canâ (Classical Net). Sometimes virtuosic, sometimes reflective, the work is distinguished by an ever-evolving rhythmic and harmonic interplay between instruments.
REVIEW:
The works heard here by the "Early Modern" native Chicago composers Ernst Bacon (1898-1990) and Leo Sowerby (1895-1968) have several stylistic commonalities between them: both rich in melodic zest, expressionist on the edge of Romanticism but further afield to the Modern in their arcs of harmonic-melodic movement, winding, and labyrinthian. Working together most impressively, the members of the Lincoln Trio approach both pieces with elan, zeal, and sympathy. If you are up for something well composed and well played, something from the recent past yet unmistakably belonging to that time, grab this and I think youâll find it worthwhile.
â Gapplegate Classical
The twice-Grammy-nominated Lincoln Trio â violinist DesirĂ©e Ruhstrat, cellist David Cunliffe, and pianist Marta Aznavoorian â offers engaging, rarely heard piano trios by 20th-century Chicago composers Leo Sowerby, winner of the Rome Prize and Pulitzer Prize for music, and Ernst Bacon, recipient of three Guggenheim Fellowships and a Pulitzer Fellowship. Baconâs Trio No. 2 for Violin, Cello and Piano (1987) receives its world-premiere recording. Hailed by The New York Times as âa Composer Known for Echoing America,â Bacon infuses his six-movement trio with American influences including marches, folksong-like melodies, and jazz rhythms, validating Virgil Thomsonâs assessment of Baconâs music as âfull of melody and variety; honest and skillful and beautiful.â Sowerbyâs Trio for violin, violincello and pianoforte (1953) is âa work of tremendous integrityâ that exhibits an âimposing structure, contrapuntal gymnastics, and a concern for instruments sounding as good as they canâ (Classical Net). Sometimes virtuosic, sometimes reflective, the work is distinguished by an ever-evolving rhythmic and harmonic interplay between instruments.
REVIEW:
The works heard here by the "Early Modern" native Chicago composers Ernst Bacon (1898-1990) and Leo Sowerby (1895-1968) have several stylistic commonalities between them: both rich in melodic zest, expressionist on the edge of Romanticism but further afield to the Modern in their arcs of harmonic-melodic movement, winding, and labyrinthian. Working together most impressively, the members of the Lincoln Trio approach both pieces with elan, zeal, and sympathy. If you are up for something well composed and well played, something from the recent past yet unmistakably belonging to that time, grab this and I think youâll find it worthwhile.
â Gapplegate Classical
Original: $9.99
-65%$9.99
$3.50Description
The twice-Grammy-nominated Lincoln Trio â violinist DesirĂ©e Ruhstrat, cellist David Cunliffe, and pianist Marta Aznavoorian â offers engaging, rarely heard piano trios by 20th-century Chicago composers Leo Sowerby, winner of the Rome Prize and Pulitzer Prize for music, and Ernst Bacon, recipient of three Guggenheim Fellowships and a Pulitzer Fellowship. Baconâs Trio No. 2 for Violin, Cello and Piano (1987) receives its world-premiere recording. Hailed by The New York Times as âa Composer Known for Echoing America,â Bacon infuses his six-movement trio with American influences including marches, folksong-like melodies, and jazz rhythms, validating Virgil Thomsonâs assessment of Baconâs music as âfull of melody and variety; honest and skillful and beautiful.â Sowerbyâs Trio for violin, violincello and pianoforte (1953) is âa work of tremendous integrityâ that exhibits an âimposing structure, contrapuntal gymnastics, and a concern for instruments sounding as good as they canâ (Classical Net). Sometimes virtuosic, sometimes reflective, the work is distinguished by an ever-evolving rhythmic and harmonic interplay between instruments.
REVIEW:
The works heard here by the "Early Modern" native Chicago composers Ernst Bacon (1898-1990) and Leo Sowerby (1895-1968) have several stylistic commonalities between them: both rich in melodic zest, expressionist on the edge of Romanticism but further afield to the Modern in their arcs of harmonic-melodic movement, winding, and labyrinthian. Working together most impressively, the members of the Lincoln Trio approach both pieces with elan, zeal, and sympathy. If you are up for something well composed and well played, something from the recent past yet unmistakably belonging to that time, grab this and I think youâll find it worthwhile.
â Gapplegate Classical





















