Hyperion’s record of the month for November brings us the triumphant final volume in The Florestan Trio’s cycle of Beethoven piano trios. The disc opens with the Piano Trio in C minor, Op 1 No 3, Beethoven’s earliest masterpiece and a work brimming with dark lyric beauty. Radical enough for Haydn – perhaps out of jealousy – to advise against its publication, this work quickly became one of its composer’s most popular chamber works. In both the other works on this disc Beethoven responded to the contemporary fashion for sets of variations on popular themes from operas. The Variations in E flat major, Op 44, are based on the hit number from Carl von Dittersdorf’s ‘The little red cap’, while the last movement of the Piano Trio in B flat major, Op 11, takes as its theme a favourite number from Joseph Weigl’s comic opera ‘Love at sea’. Ever keen to maximize his income, Beethoven switched his original top line from the clarinet to the more popular violin, so creating the charming piano trio we know today. Needless to say, The Florestan Trio is on top form in this new recording. ------------------------------------- CLASSICAL CD OF THE WEEK (The Observer) 'With the Florestan Trio's fourth and last Hyperion CD of Beethoven's complete piano trios you enter the Elysian Fields almost straight away … This Hyperion series has already been so rapturously received that the pleasures of this last disc come as no surprise. Even so, the performances' freshness can still amaze' (The Times) 'This completes the Florestan Trio's Beethoven series. I've been impressed throughout by their thoughtfulness, the way each passage is presented to maximum effect. There's an overall Florestan style too, - avoiding heaviness, keeping the textures light and airy, and giving every phrase an individual life and character' (The Gramophone) 'a most welcome completion of a superb cycle' (International Record Review) 'This final instalment of the Florestan Trio's complete Beethoven cycle is every bit as impressive as its predecessors … No one who's been following this fine series need hesitate to acquire this very well recorded disc' (BBC Music Magazine) 'The Florestan Trio certainly does not miss the pungency in the writing, though the hallmark of its performance is the elegance of the playing. The careful weighting of each instrument brings a pleasing transparency, creating a more richly detailed account than many of the alternative recordings' (The Strad)