Merz Trio - Ink (2021)
BAND/ARTIST: Merz Trio
- Title: Ink
- Year Of Release: 2021
- Label: Bright Shiny Things
- Genre: Classical, Piano
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 48:33 min
- Total Size: 185 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Account of Charles Péguy's Last Day in Paris (Excerpt)
2. Sous les Ponts de Paris (Arr. for Piano Trio)
3. Summer Evening (Excerpt)
4. D’un Vieux Jardin (Arr. for Piano Trio)
5. Kiosks (Excerpt)
6. Piano Trio in A Minor: I. Modéré
7. Preamble (A Rough Draft For An Ars Poetica)
8. Zortziko - Fandango
9. Piano Trio in A Minor: II. Pantoum: Assez vif
10. Now the Rain (Excerpt)
11. Matin, Op. 76
12. Heures ternes (Arr. for Piano Trio)
13. Piano Trio in A Minor: III. Passacaille: Très large
14. The Prose of the Trans-Siberian (Excerpt)
15. Piano Trio in A Minor: IV. Final: Animé
16. La Petite Auto (Excerpt)
17. I Write for the Day (Excerpt)
18. Trois morceaux pour piano: La plus que lente, L. 121 (Arr. for Piano Trio)
1. Account of Charles Péguy's Last Day in Paris (Excerpt)
2. Sous les Ponts de Paris (Arr. for Piano Trio)
3. Summer Evening (Excerpt)
4. D’un Vieux Jardin (Arr. for Piano Trio)
5. Kiosks (Excerpt)
6. Piano Trio in A Minor: I. Modéré
7. Preamble (A Rough Draft For An Ars Poetica)
8. Zortziko - Fandango
9. Piano Trio in A Minor: II. Pantoum: Assez vif
10. Now the Rain (Excerpt)
11. Matin, Op. 76
12. Heures ternes (Arr. for Piano Trio)
13. Piano Trio in A Minor: III. Passacaille: Très large
14. The Prose of the Trans-Siberian (Excerpt)
15. Piano Trio in A Minor: IV. Final: Animé
16. La Petite Auto (Excerpt)
17. I Write for the Day (Excerpt)
18. Trois morceaux pour piano: La plus que lente, L. 121 (Arr. for Piano Trio)
Hailing from opposite corners of the globe, Merz Trio's members can only agree on two things: (1) how to pronounce the word ‘Merz’ in a faux German accent, and (2) that shopping for concert clothes should be classified as a form of torture. The Trio met in the middle of a snow storm in NYC in December 2016; hilariously - and gloriously - we now spend the majority of our lives together, rehearsing, traveling and arguing: usually over music and whether Australian English is better than American English. Together, we’ve walked onto stages around the world and are humbled to have been recognized as Winners of the 2019 Concert Artists Guild and Fischoff Competitions and 2018 Chesapeake Competition.
But whether concerts or competitions, large or small, the most thrilling thing about all of these experiences is the energetic communities that have emerged from them. Merz Trio loves to be in community with others. We love talking and getting carried away - in the rehearsal room, on stage, after the concert. We understand what we do as a conversation between ourselves, the composer, our audience, and the changing world we step into each day. Our name, Merz, speaks to this: It’s the term coined by German artist and polymath Kurt Schwitters, who once floor-to-ceiling decorated his parents’ house in Hanover with found objects and insisted that art only occurred in shared spaces. So Merz refers to connection, to sharing, to possibility. And yes, we’re very glad Schwitters didn’t live with us.
Our rehearsal room is a noisy fusion of our interests: Music of all varieties, literature, theatre, cooking, dance, running, unnecessarily snobbish ideas about beverages. We love this messiness. We play in living rooms and large halls; galleries and schools; black box theaters and crypts. There are very few places we don’t feel at home.
And we love investigating other people’s messiness. Alongside our ‘traditional’ recitals, we create original inter-disciplinary projects, sometimes just with ourselves and our extra-musical interests, more often with inspiring and generous artists. So far, we’ve brought our music into conversation with dancers, directors, chefs, sommeliers, puppeteers, and graphic designers, and each time we collaborate, we understand the music that we play differently.
We've been encouraged in our explorations by the New England Conservatory in Boston and its visionary faculty. We’re grateful too, for other homes around the world: Yellow Barn, Snape Maltings, Avaloch Farm Institute, the Lake Champlain, Olympic, and Chesapeake Music Festivals, and the Fischoff Competition. Not to mention hundreds of welcoming venues and hosts around the US, Australia and the UK. We’re with Schwitters on this one: Art happens where people are. We hope you'll come along for the ride.
But whether concerts or competitions, large or small, the most thrilling thing about all of these experiences is the energetic communities that have emerged from them. Merz Trio loves to be in community with others. We love talking and getting carried away - in the rehearsal room, on stage, after the concert. We understand what we do as a conversation between ourselves, the composer, our audience, and the changing world we step into each day. Our name, Merz, speaks to this: It’s the term coined by German artist and polymath Kurt Schwitters, who once floor-to-ceiling decorated his parents’ house in Hanover with found objects and insisted that art only occurred in shared spaces. So Merz refers to connection, to sharing, to possibility. And yes, we’re very glad Schwitters didn’t live with us.
Our rehearsal room is a noisy fusion of our interests: Music of all varieties, literature, theatre, cooking, dance, running, unnecessarily snobbish ideas about beverages. We love this messiness. We play in living rooms and large halls; galleries and schools; black box theaters and crypts. There are very few places we don’t feel at home.
And we love investigating other people’s messiness. Alongside our ‘traditional’ recitals, we create original inter-disciplinary projects, sometimes just with ourselves and our extra-musical interests, more often with inspiring and generous artists. So far, we’ve brought our music into conversation with dancers, directors, chefs, sommeliers, puppeteers, and graphic designers, and each time we collaborate, we understand the music that we play differently.
We've been encouraged in our explorations by the New England Conservatory in Boston and its visionary faculty. We’re grateful too, for other homes around the world: Yellow Barn, Snape Maltings, Avaloch Farm Institute, the Lake Champlain, Olympic, and Chesapeake Music Festivals, and the Fischoff Competition. Not to mention hundreds of welcoming venues and hosts around the US, Australia and the UK. We’re with Schwitters on this one: Art happens where people are. We hope you'll come along for the ride.
Year 2021 | Classical | FLAC / APE
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