德布西/佛瑞/艾斯凱許/鮑蘭潔: (熱情) 法國鋼琴三重奏
查拉圖斯特拉三重奏
The Paris Conservatoire is the starting point of our adventure. Founded in 1795, the institution's ambition was to bring composers and performers together in one place, with the aim of promoting French music. Four of its representatives are featured on this recording: Gabriel Faure and Claude Debussy, setting the pace for French melodie and impressionist music; Lili Boulanger, piano prodigy, composer and the first woman to win the Prix de Rome for composition (1913), and Thierry Escaich, contemporary composer, organist, improviser and teacher, winner of four 'Composer of the Year' awards at the Victoires de la musique classique. From student to teacher, the four composers maintained close links with the Paris Conservatoire, marking the institution's history. Gabriel Faure was its director from 1905 to 1920, during which time he undertook a radical restructuring of the teaching programme. Claude Debussy also studied there, before joining the Conservatoire's Conseil superieur de l'enseignement, then still under Faure's direction. In 1909, after piano lessons with Paul Vidal, Lili Boulanger was admitted to the Conservatoire, where she studied for three years in Vidal's composition class. Following in the footsteps of his predecessors, Thierry Escaich also has close links with the institution: first as a pupil, then as a teacher of music theory, composition and organ improvisation since 1992.
CLAUDE DEBUSSY
Trio avec piano en sol majeur
1. I. Andantino con moto allegro — 08:44
2. II. Scherzo – Intermezzo (Moderato con allegro) — 03:11
3. III. Andante espressivo — 03:55
4. IV. Finale (Appassionato) — 05:23
GABRIEL FAURE
Trio avec piano op. 120
5. I. Allegro, ma non troppo — 05:33
6. II. Andantino — 09:30
7. III. Allegro vivo — 04:27
THIERRY ESCAICH
Lettres melees
8. I. Modere — 08:03
9. II. Modere — 07:32
10. III. Tres vif — 04:34
LILI BOULANGER
11. D'un matin de printemps — 04:40
Duree totale — 01:06:15
TRIO ZARATHOUSTRA
THOMAS BRIANT — violon
ELIOTT LERIDON — violoncelle
THEOTIME GILLOT — piano