Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Joshua Bell (violin), Jeremy Denk (piano) and Steven Isserlis (cello).
Just for the fun of it … Joshua Bell (violin), Jeremy Denk (piano) and Steven Isserlis (cello). Photograph: Shervin Lainez
Just for the fun of it … Joshua Bell (violin), Jeremy Denk (piano) and Steven Isserlis (cello). Photograph: Shervin Lainez

Mendelssohn: Piano Trios album review – celebrity soloists are a balanced delight

This article is more than 1 month old

Bell/Isserlis/Denk
(Sony Classical)
Two of the most celebrated trios in the repertory have power but also subtlety in Joshua Bell, Steven Isserlis and Jeremy Denk’s ego-free performances

There’s something about the combination of piano, violin and cello that seems to attract ad hoc celebrity collaborations, bringing soloists together just for the fun of playing chamber music. The idea probably began in 1949 with the formation of the “Million Dollar Trio” – pianist Arthur Rubinstein, violinist Jascha Heifetz and cellist Gregor Piatigorsky – who gave a few concerts together and made some recordings for RCA before it all ended in tears, while in the 1970s Daniel Barenboim, Pinchas Zukerman and Jacqueline du Pré recorded the Beethoven trios. More recently Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos and Yo-Yo Ma have worked together in concert and in the studio, and now we have Jeremy Denk teaming up with Joshua Bell and Steven Isserlis for these very convincing accounts of Mendelssohn’s two piano trios, the D minor Op 49 and C minor Op 66, not only among the composer’s finest chamber works, but two of the finest trios in the repertory.

The artwork for Piano Trios. Photograph: Sony Music

What is clear throughout these performances is that this is real chamber music; there’s never any sense of one player trying to dominate his colleagues or to hog the limelight. Their approach is defined by Isserlis’s soft-grained cello line in the opening bars of the D minor trio. It’s a work that, like the hyperactive C minor trio, could easily become overwrought, but here dynamism is perfectly balanced with subtlety; the delicacy and precision of the playing in the first movement of the C minor trio is a delight, though there’s no shortage of sheer power when it’s really needed.

Allow content provided by a third party?

This article includes content hosted on embed.music.apple.com. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as the provider may be using cookies and other technologies. To view this content, click 'Allow and continue'.

Listen on Apple Music (above) or on Spotify

Most viewed

Most viewed