I went on Sunday afternoon to Morse Hall to hear the first of the day's series of chamber music recitals. The forty-minute program - performed by Randall Goosby, violin; Daniel Hass, cello; and Sarina Zhang, piano - featured only one work, the first of Brahms's three piano trios.
The Piano Trio No. 1 in B major, Op. 8 was originally composed in 1854 when Brahms was only 21 years old and only a year after he had first become acquainted with the composer Robert Schumann and his wife Clara, without question the most significant encounter of his musical career. Brahms wrote the greater portion of the trio Hanover, where he had been visiting the famed violinist Joseph Joachim in the company of the Schumanns, and then completed it shortly after the couple had returned to Düsseldorf. Unfortunately, almost immediately upon his return home, Robert, who had suffered from severe depression for most of his life, attempted suicide by trying to drown himself in the Rhine. Brahms rushed to Clara's side and helped her place Robert in an asylum in Bonn where he remained until his death at age 46 only two years later. Under these circumstances, it would be interesting to know if either Joachim or the Schumanns had any direct influence on the composition of the work. Certainly, there were some evident connections. For example, Brahms had inscribed at the top of the score the words "Kreisler junior." This was a reference to a fictional character created by E.T.A. Hoffmann, a widely read critic and author of fantastic stories. Schumann had found inspiration from this same character in his 1838 piano cycle Kreisleriana, Op. 16.
On the recommendation of Clara to Breitkopf und Härtel, the trio was the first of Brahms's chamber works to be published. (For that matter, it was his first piece to be played in the U.S. when in November 1855 it was given its American premiere in New York by the pianist William Mason.) When Simrock took over the publication of Brahms's works in 1889 the firm gave the composer the opportunity to revise any he so chose. Brahms took advantage of the offer to extensively revise the Op. 8 trio in spite of his famous remark that his intention had been "not to stick a wig on it but merely to comb its hair a little." The thrust of the revisions was to tone down Brahms's youthful Romanticism in favor of the more restrained style of his mature works. What's most remarkable about the revision, however, is that Brahms did not withdraw the earlier version from publication but left both available. Considering what a perfectionist Brahms was (he is reported to have destroyed some twenty string quartets before allowing the two Op. 51 quartets to be published and then only after having made extensive revisions following a private performance), it is astonishing that he would allow continued publication of an earlier version of whose deficiencies he felt so strongly that he took the time after the lapse of so many years to correct them. One can only assume that the older Brahms felt a strong degree of nostalgia for the passionate Romantic he had once been. Perhaps too the fact that the work's initial composition had been so intimately connected with Brahms's first meeting with his beloved Clara had created an emotional attachment in his mind that he was unwilling to let go.
The performance of the revised trio at Sunday's recital was excellent. Though I would have enjoyed hearing at least once the original 1854 version for comparison's sake, there can be no argument that the 1889 version is one of Brahms's greatest achievements in chamber music. The three Juilliard musicians here did full justice to it.
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