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Piano trio by Antonín Dvořák From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Piano Trio No. 3 in F minor, Op. 65 (B. 130), is a piano trio by Antonín Dvořák.[1][2][3] As with the Scherzo capriccioso, the Hussite Overture, the Ballade in D minor, and the Seventh Symphony, composed in the same period, the work is written in a more dramatic, dark and aggressive style that supersedes the carefree folk style of Dvořák's "Slavonic period".[4]
Piano Trio | |
---|---|
No. 3 | |
by Antonín Dvořák | |
Key | F minor |
Catalogue | B. 130 |
Opus | 65 |
Composed | 1883 |
Performed | 27 October 1883 : Mladá Boleslav |
Published | 1883 |
Publisher | Simrock |
Duration | 39 minutes |
Movements | 4 |
The composition consists of four movements in the classical tradition:
A typical performance takes approximately 39 minutes.[2]
Dvořák began writing out the piano trio in February 1883 and completed it on 31 March.[3] The premiere was held on 27 October 1883 at a concert in Mladá Boleslav; Dvořák himself played the piano part. The piece was published shortly after by Simrock.[2]
Eduard Hanslick wrote in the Neue Freie Presse on 13 February 1884: "The most valuable gem brought to us amid the plethora of concerts in recent weeks is undeniably Dvorak’s new Piano Trio in F minor. It demonstrates that the composer finds himself at the pinnacle of his career."[5]
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