There’s a certain meeting of minds in this new album of horn trios in that it coincides with birth-date anniversaries of the programme’s three composers, born successively 70 years apart: Johannes Brahms (b. 1833), Lennox Berkeley (b. 1903) and Jonathan Leschnoff (b. 1973).
Making their debut recording together are David Cooper, principal horn of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra; violinist Alexander Kerr, concertmaster formerly of the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra and currently of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra; and distinguished pianist Orion Weiss, who already has numerous successful recordings to his credit on the Naxos label.
The viability of the horn trio was definitively established by Brahms in 1865. He had learned the natural horn as a child and infused his Trio with a range of moods, including a deeply felt slow movement in honour of his mother who had died earlier in the year and a carefree finale which explores the horn’s hunting legacy. Inspired by this precedent, Lennox Berkeley’s Trio is lively and characterful with a sequence of ingenious and playful variations. GRAMMY-nominated Jonathan Leshnoff is one of America’s leading contemporary composers and his 2016 Trio moves from darkness to light, and is full of pointed syncopations, before arriving at a joyous conclusion.