Blurring: Fauré's Piano Trio in D minor, Op.120

John Singer Sargent Gabriele Fauré and Mrs Patrick Campbell (Charcoal, 1898) * * * * Gabriele Fauré (1845–1924) Piano Trio in D minor, Op.120 In the early 20 th century Debussy, Stravinsky, and Schoenberg revolutionized the foundation of Western music in the areas of tonality, harmony, and symmetric meter. At the same time, Gabriele Fauré was working with this foundation, not by abandoning the traditional structures, but by “blurring” them – especially in his later works. (Christopher Steele, Tonal and Formal Blurring in Fauré’s Piano Trio Op. 120. ) “Blurring” of tradition is an excellent description for Fauré, but impossible to address in a program note. However, a selective sketch of his life might provide a hint. As a composer, from an early age, Fauré developed independently of the establishment. Rather than the Paris Conservatoire, a gateway for any French musician, he attended the École Niedermeyer in Paris. ...