When Shostakovich wrote his Piano Quintet in 1940, most of his chamber music had yet to be composed. Combining formal purity and freedom of tone, the quintet was hailed as a masterpiece and has remained his most popular chamber work. In the last years of a long and productive life, he composed a cycle of songs with piano trio, innovative in both form and structure, a hymn to art, friendship and nature possessing extraordinary evocative power. To tackle these major works of the twentieth century, the Trio Wanderer are joined here by violinist Catherine Montier, violist Christophe Gaugué, and mezzo-soprano Ekaterina Semenchuk.
1 Shostakovich: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: I. Prelude (Lento)
2 Shostakovich: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: II. Fugue (Adagio)
3 Shostakovich: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: III. Scherzo (Allegretto)
4 Shostakovich: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: IV. Intermezzo (Lento)
5 Shostakovich: Piano Quintet in G minor, Op. 57: V. Finale (Allegretto)
6 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: I. Ophelia’s Song
7 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: II. Gamayun, the Prophet Bird
8 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: III. We Were Together
9 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: IV. the Town Sleeps
10 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: V. the Storm
11 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: VI. Secret Signs
12 Shostakovich: Seven Romances on Poems By Alexander Blok, Op. 127: VII. Music