World's Largest Sheet Music Selection

19898276
Trio No. 2
19898276
19898276

Trio No. 2 The Traits of Messina by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music

By Richard Wernick
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 1
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 2
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 3
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 4
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 5
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 6
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 7
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 8
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 9
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 10
Trio No. 2 Piano Trio scores gallery preview page 11
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 2
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 3
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 4
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 5
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 6
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 7
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 8
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 9
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 10
Trio No. 2 by Richard Wernick Piano Trio - Sheet Music page 11
Chamber Music Violin, Cello, Piano

SKU: PR.114415550

The Traits of Messina. Composed by Richard Wernick. Sws. Premiered by Trio Cleonice; Jordan Hall, Boston. Contemporary. Score and parts. With Standard notation. Composed May 18 2012. 52 pages. Duration 15 minutes. Theodore Presser Company #114-41555. Published by Theodore Presser Company (PR.114415550).

UPC: 680160609178. 9 x 12 inches.

Wernick's Trio No. 2 was written for Trio Cleonice, who premiered the work in March, 2013. Vance R. Koven of The Boston Musical Intelligencer wrote, in part, "The impeccably skilled writing contains some arresting and appealing elements, such as the melodic arc of the strings in the first movement carried over a steady rhythm of eighths or sixteenths in the piano (a bit like the finale of Brahms’s third piano quartet); the haunting sonorities in the second movement of muted violin against quiet spiccato in the cello and spare piano punctuation." The premiere performance is available on YouTube.

Close X

By signing up you consent with the terms in our Privacy Policy

I am a music teacher.