The scheduled programme had included Trios by Debussy and Chaminade, and I’d done my homework so that at least I’d have some idea about what was what. But very unfortunately the Fiorini Trio had had to cancel at very short notice - so it was extraordinary that the concert took place at all, thanks to the London Mozart Trio standing in.
But gone were the French composers, and the concert confronted us with Brahms in C minor - a daunting prospect. Big chords and then one of those muscular turbulent Brahms themes set the piece going, and the second theme, though gentler and moving by smaller intervals, seemed equally restless. The texture was characteristically dense, full of interweaving lines, triplets against duple time: it was material that could have formed a very large scale movement. But it turned out to be a very terse and its brevity took me by surprise - suddenly the coda was upon us, two loud chords and it was done. The London Mozart Trio had played it with all the energy it demanded and it was a powerful opener.
The Presto non assai (there’s something very Brahmsian about that: presto - as fast possible - non assai - but not too much!) began with Colin Stone, piano, characterising nicely the strange little wandering theme. The whole movement was very ambiguous - you never knew how dangerous it might become, until it slowed down and petered out very quietly. The slow movement’s arching main theme is presented by the strings, then taken up by the piano, and this sympathetic dialogue characterises the whole movement, which you might think of as a very tender dialogue between the strings and piano - until with two sudden loud chords the piano brutally declares it over. The finale is full of agitated wanderings, which at times were played with the same strenuous minor key turbulence that dominated the first movement. Come the coda the minor key agitation was transformed into major key vitality, the three players addressing the music with a conviction that set the heart racing.