Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)

Piano Trio (1914)

Ravel’s Piano Trio was the last of his great pre-War scores. In fact, he completed the piece in a rush to join the French army in the late summer of 1914 (thankfully, for Ravel and posterity, the army rejected him on grounds he was too slight of build to fight. He served in the Great War as an ambulance driver instead). There is, perhaps in its closing pages, a sense of the heady exuberance that greeted the outbreak of hostilities; otherwise the Trio stands as an astounding, timeless creation that quickly established itself as one of the leading works in its genre.

Much of the music is informed by gestures found in folk music from Ravel’s native Basque region (he was sketching a piano concerto on Basque themes that he never finished around the same time he was composing the Trio). The first movement, in fact, begins with a Basque-ish rhythmic pattern: a three-plus-three-plus-two grouping that has the effect of completely obscuring the barline and any strong sense of meter. Both of the movement’s themes – the first narrow and chromatic, the second folk-like and lyrical – try to counter that feeling, but without complete success: it is a striking, hypnotic movement in large part because of this wonderfully strange rhythmic groove.

The second movement, “Pantoum,” continues the play of rhythm while it adapts the Malaysian poetic form from which it derives its title into musical terms. Its two themes – the first, choppy and staccato; the second, a tempestuous waltz – alternate wildly before being interrupted by a broad, expansive trio section.

The Trio’s third movement is perhaps as concise a passacaglia (variations on a bass line) as any composer wrote, its ten variations building to a mighty climax before retreating into the sweeping, orchestral-like hues of the finale. The latter wraps up this most phenomenal of chamber scores with gusto: in hindsight, it forms an aptly shining close to the most remarkable chapter of Ravel’s career.

© Jonathan Blumhofer

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