SKU: 11582031229

flute cello piano trios fortepiano trio

Sale price$16.20 Regular price$18.00
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $4.50 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 19 - Jul 24

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

flute cello piano trios fortepiano trioFLUTE, CELLO & PIANO TRIOS (CVLD242) Composer: Mendelssohn, Weber, Martinu Performer: FortePiano Trio ( Leonora Armellini, Ludovico Armellini, Tommaso Benciolini) Available in: HD File, CD Tracks FELIX MENDELSSOHN BARTHOLDY Trio in D minor, Op. 49 01 Molto Allegro Agitato 02 Andante con moto, Tranquillo 03 Scherzo, Leggiero e vivace 04 Finale, Allegro assai appassionato CARL MARIA VON WEBER Trio in G minor, Op. 63 05 Allegro moderato 06 Scherzo,

FLUTE, CELLO & PIANO TRIOS (CVLD242)

ComposerMendelssohn, Weber, Martinu
PerformerFortePiano Trio ( Leonora Armellini, Ludovico Armellini, Tommaso Benciolini)

Available in: HD File, CD

Tracks

FELIX MENDELSSOHN BARTHOLDY
Trio in D minor, Op.49
01 - Molto Allegro Agitato
02 - Andante con moto, Tranquillo
03 - Scherzo, Leggiero e vivace
04 - Finale, Allegro assai appassionato

CARL MARIA VON WEBER
Trio in G minor, Op.63
05 - Allegro moderato
06 - Scherzo, Allegro vivace
07 - Andante espressivo
08 - Finale, Allegro

BOHUSLAV MARTINU
Trio for flute, cello and piano
09 - Poco allegretto
10 - Adagio
11 - Andante, Allegro scherzando


Leonora Armellini, piano
Tommaso Benciolini, flute
Ludovico Armellini, cello

24bit/88.2kHz original live-in-studio recording, Preganziol, April 14th, 2013

Notes

FortePiano Trio
Composed of Tommaso Benciolini on flute and the twins Ludovico and Leonora Armellini on cello and piano respectively, the FortePiano Trio was born from the desire to bring together the diverse and eclectic personalities of three friends in a common musical project with the aim of spreading and expanding the repertoire for this unusual formation. All graduated with honors at a very young age and winners of national and international competitions, they perfected their skills with great masters including Lilya Zilberstein, Pierre-Yves Artaud, Mario Caroli and Giovanni Sollima at some of Europe's most prestigious musical institutions such as the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome, the Hochschule für Musik und Theater in Hamburg, the Scuola Universitaria di Musica della Svizzera Italiana in Lugano, and the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris.
In 2012, the FortePiano Trio began an intense concert activity that leads them to perform regularly in the main Italian cities.
The young ensemble is also committed to commissioning and disseminating new music, and is the dedicatee of the "Trio in due movimenti" by composer Simone Tonin and the "Merry Gentlemen Variations, Trio Fantasia on a Christmas Carol" by composer and conductor Andrea Battistoni, receiving critical and public acclaim at every performance. 

"He is the master-trio of the present [...] a masterpiece that will still delight grandchildren and great-grandchildren after many years." This is how Robert Schumann presented Felix Mendelssohn's Trio in D minor Op. 49 for violin, cello, and piano in 1840, just published by Breitkopf & Härtel. A happy creation by the "Mozart of the 20th century – Schumann continues – the clearest musician who first clearly saw and reconciled the contradictions of the era." The English publisher J.J. Ever was also ready to bet on the popularity the work would achieve, with its serene discursiveness to which the elegant embellishments of the piano part added brilliant effects. Ever asked Mendelssohn for an arrangement of the Trio, specifically of the second and third movements, with the flute in place of the violin, to be published as Andante and Rondo (from Op. 49). The author ultimately decided to transcribe the entire work for piano, flute, and cello, not limiting himself to a simple transposition of the violin part. In adapting the original violin part for the flute, Mendelssohn took into account the different sonic peculiarities of the wind instrument and introduced some significant variations (octave transpositions, modifications of rhythmic figurations, and minor adjustments) which constitute a veritable rethinking of the part in function of the altered sonic balance between the three instruments.

In a nineteenth century that largely did not seem to particularly love wind instruments, at least among its major musical protagonists, Carl Maria von Weber instead showed a particular predilection for some of them; clarinet, horn, and bassoon above all, for their evocative sonorities so suitable for representing the "supernatural nature" that serves as the backdrop to his romantic melodramas (Weber also dedicated several concertos to the three instruments). The flute also finds its place in several of the composer's chamber pieces, the most notable of which is the Trio in G minor Op. 63 for flute, cello, and piano, composed between 1818 and 1819.
The agreeably conversational character of the work is evident from the composure of its formal structure in four movements, all adhering to classical models, and in their overall expressive balance. Without sacrificing some more intense romantic color in the outer movements, the Trio maintains a range of "affections" whose measure of reference is given by the carefree dance character of the brief "Scherzo" and the gentle lieder-like melody of the "Andante espressivo" bearing the title Schäfers Klage (The Shepherd's Lament).

Already an unruly and rebellious child prodigy, as well as a talented violinist, the American-naturalized Bohemian Bohuslav Martinu was an artistically free spirit, attentive to the various directions of twentieth-century musical and cultural avant-gardes, which he frequented assiduously during his long stay in Paris (1928-1940), from where he would move to the United States and remain until 1953. In his output, Martinu gives space to the moods of Czech folklore, especially in the rhythmic component which is always strongly highlighted in his works, marked by a general climate of serenity and eclectic pleasure in making music, also evident in the Trio in F major for flute, cello, and piano (1944). The dispassionate and ironic, yet not provocative, aspect of his creativity can be identified in the motor vitality, in his very personal interpretation of tonal syntax, and in the sometimes capricious changeability of expressive moods; stylistic peculiarities that in the Trio find their disciplining element in the classicist formalism of the structures to which the composer deliberately adheres to indulge his underlying lyrical and nostalgic vein, particularly evident in the pensive central "Adagio." The first movement, "Poco Allegretto," and the finale "Allegretto scherzando" (connected to the central tempo by a cadenza, "Andante," for solo flute) share a dry linearity of writing in which the rhythmic sprightliness and the close dialogue between the three instruments, always in perfect balance with each other, are fully evident.
Marco Materassi 

Musical Producer: Leopoldo Armellini
Recording, mix and mastering engineer: Marco Lincetto
Editing: Mattia Zanatta
Cover photo by Marco Lincetto

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 11582031229

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.1 ★★★★★
Based on 21 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
R
Verified Purchase
RSj
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
It is light weight, rechargeable and it works hands-free.
This wine bottle opener is well designed and well constructed. It comes with a foil cutter and works hands-free when you push the button. It pulls up the cork - and then pushes it back out to discard the cork. It is rechargeable!! It is replacing an older opener that left behind cork fragments in the wine - and ate AA batteries quickly.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2026
D
Verified Purchase
DME
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Best on the market!
I have tried three other brands of electric cork pullers. The fact that I now invested in a fourth probably telegraphs what this review is all about: this Vinabon device is great, hands down winner in the electric cork puller sweepstakes! First, its motor is more powerful. Some winemakers are employing corks that fit pretty tightly, and the other brands I used would occasionally be unable to remove the cork. The screw would simply stop turning, without ay way of resuming. Advantage: the bottle. Second, it is small, about half the size of the others, leaving a small footprint on the counter. Third, it lasts much longer on a single charge. It doesn't sit in a cradle, because it doesn't need to. Assuming you open 10 to 20 bottles a week, you will be able to go two weeks without needing to plug the charging cable in, and a full charge does not take long. 4 vertical lights on the cylinder tell you how much of a charge remains. Fourth, you simply press and release the start button and maintain gentle pressure on the bottle while the device descends into the cork and removes it. As soon as you remove the device from the bottle, it immediately begins to eject the cork. All with that one touch of the button! Fifth, if you encounter a particularly tight cork, the device will stop, whereupon you push the button again and it continues. A couple of synthetic corks required me to restart 3 for 4 times, but it ultimately conquered them all! That leaves only one issue: a failed cork that breaks during the removal process, because the screw cannot engage the cork enough to remove it without it breaking. To my knowledge, the only solutions to this, with any cork puller, are to resort to an Ah So, or if that cannot do it, just shove the cork down into the bottle, and drink the entire bottle in one evening. Truth to tell, I have, myself, actually enjoyed that latter remedial step, especially with a larger format bottle on an evening when I am dining alone. I cannot yet report on the ultimate problem that seems to vex all electric cork pullers I have owned: If the cork disintegrates within the cylinder during removal, how do you get the remains out? I threw my last cork puller away because I could not remove the cork detritus stuck in the cylinder, rendering the device useless thereafter. If there is a solution to that, I would not be surprised to find that this unit already handles the problem. If BMW were to ever make an electric cork puller, I expect it would be much like this one. t costs almost twice as much as the others I have owned, but you get what you pay for. After all, you can buy a small fleet of Yugo's for the price of a BMW. Bravo, Vinabon! I
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2024
T
Verified Purchase
timOBX
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Best Wine Opener ever
I hoped I made a wise choice to buy this wine opener and boy did I make the right choice. I have had 2 other electric openers and this is by far the best. You place it on the bottle and press the button once. You hold the bottle and opener and the opener does its job, you don't need to hold the button down. Once it pulls the cork turn it up side down and place it on the counter. It automatically stops and then automatically reverses and ejects the cork. You dinner guests will love watching it. Great opener!!!!!!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2026
L
Verified Purchase
Linda
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 4
Nice little wine opener
Nice little wine opener. It works perfect so far , it doesn't take up a lot of space on your counter. Fast shipping.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2026
B
Verified Purchase
barbara a.
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Best
Great. Easy to use. Works great
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2026

recommand products