From the composer’s time to our own, a “Schubertiade” is shorthand for a magical night of friendship and music-making, all revolving around the sparkling creations of Franz Schubert. A contemporary called him “a heaven-inspired clairvoyant who, as it were, simply shook his most glorious things out of his sleeve.” On this episode,, we’ll share with you our own “Schubertiade” – featuring some of the composer’s most glorious confections from the stages of the Heifetz International Music Institute.
This Episode’s Playlist
Franz Schubert: Grand Duo in A Major, D. 574
II. Scherzo. Presto
Chloé Kiffer, violin | Hsin-Chiao Liao, piano
Francis Auditorium, Mary Baldwin University, Staunton, VA | 07.51.2015
Schubert: Piano Trio No. 1 in B-flat Major, D. 898
III. Scherzo: Allegro
Erda Trio: Carlos Arroyo, violín | Nicco Mazziotto, cello | Seth Schultheis, piano
First Presbyterian Church, Staunton, VA | 07.01.2021
Schubert: Piano Quintet in A Major, D. 667 (“Trout”)
IV. Andantino. Allegretto (Tema con variazioni )
Brian Lewis, violin; | Barbara Westphal, viola | Colin Carr, cello | Sam Suggs, bass | Rohan DeSilva, piano
Francis Auditorium, Mary Baldwin University, Staunton, VA | 08.02.2019
Schubert: Rondo Brillant in B Minor, D. 895
Itamar Zorman, violin | Alexander Tentser, piano
Francis Auditorium, Mary Baldwin University, Staunton, VA | 07.17.2016
Schubert: String Quartet No. 14 in D minor, D. 810 “Death & the Maiden”
Borromeo Quartet: Nicholas Kitchen, violin | Kristopher Tong, violin | Mai Motobuchi, viola | Yeesun Kim, cello
Samuel Suggs, bass
The Heifetz Band: All 85 students of the 2019 Heifetz International Music Institute
First Presbyterian Church, Staunton, VA | 08.09.2019
Go Deeper
- You can count on Britain’s Classic FM to weigh in with Twenty Facts about Franz Schubert. (Schubertiades come in at No. 7).
- How did a tiny trout (the original Schubert song clocks in at just over two minutes) become such a tall fish tale? Read the backstory over how the beloved Trout Quintet came to be!
- “Franz Schubert’s Death and the Maiden sears a haunting image on my psyche that has few equals in music,” writes essayist Terez Rose. Read the full story here…including the shout-out to our resident Borromeo Quartet “in a fabulous rendition I recommend watching several times in a row.”
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