Lucy Gould violin Alice Neary cello Benjamin Frith piano
From their
early success at the Charles Hennen and the inaugural Melbourne Competitions
through being selected as British “Rising Stars” in 1998, the Gould Piano Trio
has emerged as one of the finest chamber ensembles, boasting an impressive
discography, with festival appearances at Edinburgh, Cheltenham, City of
London, Bath, Aldeburgh, Spoleto and the BBC Proms.
In their
regular and extensive tours to the U.S.A.
they have covered the major venues in New
York including the Lincoln Centre, Frick Collection
and Weill Hall. In Europe, highlights have included the Queens Hall -
Edinburgh, Concertgebouw – Amsterdam and the
Palais des Beaux Arts - Brussels, as well as
recitals in Paris, Cologne,
Athens and Vienna,
as well as performing regularly at London’s
Wigmore Hall.
But whether
at home or in the Far East and New
Zealand, the trio have constantly striven to
engage new audiences through outreach programmes, often working with school
children - as filmed by the BBC during the 2006 Leeds International Piano
Competition. A recent tour of North America’s West Coast saw them giving a
presentation of James MacMillan’s trio, Fourteen Little Pictures, to students
in the University
of Southern Oregon; a
piece they have championed since performing it at the BBC Symphony’s MacMillan
Festival at the Barbican.For three
years they were
Artists-in Residence at the Royal Northern College of Music and still maintain
a close
connection. This has given them the opportunity to build relationships with
young ensembles, introducing them to a wider repertoire, probing deeper into
the meaning of the scores and giving regular performances in the city’s busy
concert schedule.
Indeed,
while playing most of the established master-works of the trio repertoire –
their discography includes the complete trios of both Mendelssohn and Brahms –
they have an artistic ambition to extend boundaries, challenging audiences (and
themselves!) with contemporary works and commissioning such trios as Chapman’s Poolby Judith Bingham. The 2007-8 season saw a
new commission to celebrate the tenth annual Corbridge Chamber Music Festival
in Northumberland (which the trio established with clarinettist Robert Plane): Radical
Light for clarinet and piano trio by Benjamin Wallfisch.The connection with Robert Plane has borne
fruit in the trio’s Naxos project of recent
years to record the late English Romantics, combining the Piano Trios of
Stanford and Bax with their clarinet chamber music, short-listed for a Gramophone
award.Naxos recently released their CD of the Piano Trios of John Ireland.
The Trio’s
special affinity with the romantic composers is enhanced by the discovery of
their lesser-known contemporaries such as Niels Gade (BBC Radio 3 from Glasgow)
and Robert Fuchs (“Editor’s Choice” in Gramophone - Quartz label), viewing the
more popular repertoire of composers such as Schumann and Dvorak in a new
perspective.
2008-9 has
seen two appearances at London’s Wigmore Hall celebrating the bi-centenary of
Mendelssohn’s birth with his two trios and special concerts to mark the
centenary of Messiaen, performing his visionary Quatuor pour la Fin du Temps,
their latest recording with Robert Plane on Chandos.Winter 2009 saw the release by Quartz of a
box set of their complete Brahms trio music and a disc on the Wigmore Halls’s
own label, Wigmore Live, featuring MacMillan and Schubert, recorded at their
recital last July.