The idea for this, the penultimate work in Fauré’s oeuvre, came in 1922 from his publisher Jacques Durand, who had published Ravel’s famous Piano Trio just a few years earlier. Fauré initially did not get beyond sketching the work, and for a while he considered using a clarinet as an alternative to the violin. Only when he went to spend the summer in Annecy-le-Vieux in Savoy did Fauré succeed in writing the Andantino, the unusually extensive, elegiac middle movement of this Trio. The outer movements then followed in Paris the next winter. This late work by Fauré is notable for its clear lines and forms and for its balance between the piano and the string instruments. This Urtext edition is a significant addition to the French chamber music in the Urtext catalogue of G. Henle Publishers.
Content/Details
- Piano Trio d minor op. 120
Youtube
Preface
Mainz, Herbst 2017 Fabian Kolb Only after relatively long preparation and a laborious creative process was Gabriel Fauré (1845 – 1924) able to complete his Piano Trio op. 120 in the spring of 1923. The impulse for his penultimate composition, which was followed only by the String Quartet op. 121 of 1923/24, had already come from his publisher Jacques Durand in early … more
Critical Commentary
About the composer

Gabriel Fauré
Representative exponent of French music around 1900. His creative work is centered around the art song, piano music (nocturnes, barcarolles, impromptus, valse-caprice), and chamber music – alongside other genres.
1845 | Born in Pamiers (Ariège) on May 12, the son of a primary school teacher. |
1854–65 | Attends the École de musique classique et religieuse (founded by L. Niedermeyer), where liturgical musicians were educated; lessons with Saint-Saëns (from 1861). |
1866–70 | Organist at the church of Saint-Sauveur in Rennes. |
1871 | After occupying various organist positions in Paris, he becomes assistant organist to Saint-Saëns at Saint-Sulpice. He numbers among the founding members of the Société nationale de musique. Performances of his works in their concerts. |
1874 | Premiere of his “Suite d’orchestre” in F major (“Symphony No. 1”), which is a compilation of existing pieces. |
1875/76 | Violin Sonata No. 1 in A major, Op. 13. |
1876–79 | Piano Quartet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 15 |
1877 | Maître de chapelle at Paris’s Église de la Madeleine. |
1876/78 | Premiere of his choral work “Les Djinns,” Op. 12. |
from 1879 | Attends performances of Wagner’s music; in his own compositions he distances himself from Wagner. |
1885 | Premiere of his Symphony No. 2 in D minor, later destroyed. |
1887/88 | Requiem, Op. 48. |
1891 | “Cinq Mélodies ‘de Venise’,” Op. 58, on texts by Verlaine. |
1892–94 | “La bonne chanson,” Op. 61, on texts by Verlaine. |
1896 | Successor to Dubois at the Madeleine. He conducts a composition class at the Paris Conservatoire. |
1900 | Premiere of the tragédie lyrique “Prométhée,” Op. 82. |
1905–20 | Director of the Conservatoire. |
1909 | President of the Société musicale indépendante. |
1913 | Premiere in Monte Carlo of his opera “Pénélope.” |
1919 | Song cycle, “Mirages,” Op. 113, with clear features of his modernist late style. |
1924 | Death in Paris on November 4. |
About the authors
This beautiful Henle edition is comprehensively laid out, with background information as well as detailed notes on dynamics, bowing, fingering and stylistic choices. This excellent edition is clear in its layout and stylistic decisions.