Although hardly a household
name today, Johann Nepomuk Hummel was a pupil of Mozart, and was
considered in his time to be one of Europe’s greatest composers and
pianists. Like his teacher, he was also a child prodigy, and he so
impressed Mozart that the composer began to teach him free of charge.
These piano trios were composed in the late 1700s, a time of Revolution
and the Napoleonic wars, with great upheaval reverberating throughout
the continent. This upheaval is clear to see in the experimentation in
Hummel’s music; he started to abandon the usual threemovement form for
one with four movements, a remarkable feature more common of the
orchestral symphony than chamber music at the time. Despite the apparent
simplicity of Hummel’s music,
a
closer listen reveals the tightly constructed complexity beneath: the
Trio in E Op.83, for example, ironically marked ‘innocente’, starts in E
major, only to move swiftly into the distant key of A flat. Hummel then
leads the listener through some beautifully lyrical melodic writing,
underpinned by unusual modulations and harmonic changes. The release features three young Italian performers, Alessandro Deljavan, Daniela
Cammarano and Luca Magariello, who, despite their youth, all have
established careers behind them. With Deljavan and Cammarano having
studied in Milan, and Magariello in Turin, the three musicians have all
worked variously as soloists and orchestral players both in Italy and
abroad, counting several international prizes between them. They are
delighted to be collaborating together for this project, being
enthusiastic performers of Hummel’s music and committed to bringing his
extensive oeuvre to new audiences. (Arkiv Music)
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