Sibelius’s life of 
                more than ninety years could be divided 
                into three roughly equal periods. The 
                creative genius of the middle period 
                has him gaining recognition as a truly 
                great composer. Unusually in art, and 
                sadly for us, he subsequently became 
                silent for almost three decades and 
                probably destroyed his 8th 
                Symphony. In his first period, which 
                may be considered to have ended by the 
                time he composed the Kullervo 
                symphony (in 1892), he had yet to develop 
                a distinctive voice. Virtually all the 
                music on this disc predates that work 
                and was mostly written during summer 
                holidays for his family to play. If 
                played "blind", it would be 
                unrecognisable as Sibelius or even as 
                Scandinavian. Central Europe would seem 
                nearer the mark, especially in the Korpo 
                trio where he alludes to a Bach fugue; 
                Haydn and Beethoven are noticeable influences. 
                In particular, the section beginning 
                at 9’26" in the slow movement recalls 
                the Moonlight Sonata. This is 
                by far the longest work on the disc 
                at almost 36 minutes. The Lovisa 
                trio also has three movements but lasts 
                just 15 minutes; it is clearly an advance 
                on the earlier Korpo trio – a 
                move towards the concision of later 
                Sibelius. Everything else is in miniature, 
                with the A flat Allegretto occupying 
                all of 46 seconds. All of these works 
                except the Lovisa trio are receiving 
                their première recordings. 
              
 
              
This disc, the second 
                and presumably last of a series of Sibelius’s 
                music for piano trio, is beautifully 
                played, recorded and presented. The 
                performers make as much as they can 
                of the music without ever pretending 
                these are masterworks. The sound is 
                intimate and well-balanced. The booklet 
                is excellent and contains authoritative 
                notes by the pianist, Folke Gräsback 
                who is a Sibelius specialist and has 
                apparently given 79 world premières 
                of his music. 
              
 
              
In summary, don’t come 
                here looking for recognisable Sibelius. 
                We should nevertheless be grateful to 
                BIS for an interesting insight into 
                his development. 
              
 
              
Patrick C Waller 
                 
              
Volume 
                1