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The spectacular young Jupiter Trio won the Classical Recording
Foundation's 2004 Samuel Sanders award, and this recording of two of
the repertoire's greatest trios, is the result. Beethoven's trio -
composed in 1809 and often referred to as "The Ghost" -
was his first work in the genre in eleven years. Those eleven
years marked a seismic rupture in Beethoven's life and music: his
recognition that his hearing disability was indeed progressive and
likely incurable; his subsequent suicidal depression in 1802, and
his rebirth/recreation of himself in 1803 as a "hero"
struggling against "fate". From the Third
Symphony of 1803 on, Beethoven's music "breathes in a different
world" than anything that had come before, and the
"Ghost" is a perfect example of the sort of innovation and
daring that marks Beethoven's mature music. Composed in 1943,
Shostakovich's second trio is regarded as one of his finest
compositions. Describing the first performance, Rostislav
Dubinsky, later the first violinist of the Borodin Quartet
remembered: "The music left a devastating impression. People
cried openly. The last, the 'Jewish Part' of the Trio, by popular
acclaim had to be repeated. After the first performance it was
forbidden to play the Trio. Nobody was surprised." Praised for
its mesmerizing energy in performance, the Jupiter Trio was awarded
first prize at the Fourth Osaka International Chamber Music
Competition in May of 2002. Chosen from 54 ensembles representing 19
countries, the Jupiter Trio became the first American ensemble in
the history of the competition to bring home the gold medal.
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