Shostakovich: Complete Works for Piano Trio
This recording brings together Shostakovich‘s only three works for, or with, piano trio. They span his entire career and thus offer a snapshot of his evolving style from teenage student to international celebrity to revered master. But their differences are outweighed by a common musical purpose: the search for meaning and expression. “The capacity to create music that transforms the listener, having heard it, into a different person,” writes scholar Laurel Fay, “…was, in Shostakovich’s view, the loftiest aspiration any composer could harbour.”
Shostakovich’s commitment to communicating with a broad public, combined with the aesthetic demands of the Soviet state, ensured that unlike many of his contemporaries in the West, he did not join the ranks of the avant-garde “innovators.” But he was not a conservative—he repudiated those who slavishly imitated past masters. In a 1968 interview, he explained his attitude toward modernist techniques: “To a certain extent I think the formula ‘the end justifies the means’ is valid in music. All means? All of them, if they contribute to the end objective.”
© 2006 by Robert Rival