work as an exercise, we should have to pronounce it
a most excellent one. But the ideal content,
which is always estimable and often truly beautiful
as well as original, raises it high above the status
of an exercise. The fundamental fault of the
Trio lies in this, that the composer tried to fill
a given form with ideas, and to some extent failed
to do so—the working-out sections especially
testify to the correctness of this opinion. That
the notion of regarding form as a vessel—a
notion oftener acted upon than openly professed—is
a mischievous one will hardly be denied, and if it
were denied, we could not here discuss so wide a question
as that of “What is form?” The comparatively
ineffective treatment of the violin and violoncello
also lays the composer open to censure. Notwithstanding
its weaknesses the work was received with favour by
the critics, the most pronounced conservatives not
excepted. That the latter gave more praise to
it than to Chopin’s previously-published compositions
is a significant fact, and may be easily accounted
for by the less vigorous originality and less exclusive
individuality of the Trio, which, although superior
in these respects to the Sonata, Op. 4, does not equal
the composer’s works written in simpler forms.
Even the most hostile of Chopin’s critics, Rellstab,
the editor of the Berlin musical journal Iris, admits—after
censuring the composer’s excessive striving after
originality, and the unnecessarily difficult pianoforte
passages with their progressions of intervals alike
repellent to hand and ear—that this is
“on the whole a praiseworthy work, which, in
spite of some excursions into deviating bye-paths,
strikes out in a better direction than the usual productions
of the modern composers” (1833, No. 21).
The editor of the Leipzig “Allgemeine musikalische
Zeitung,” a journal which Schumann characterises
as “a sleepy place,” is as eulogistic
as the most rabid Chopin admirer could wish.
Having spoken of the “talented young man”
as being on the one hand under the influence of Field,
and on the other under that of Beethoven, he remarks:—
In the Trio everything is new: the school, which is the neo- romantic; the art of pianoforte-playing, the individuality, the originality, or rather the genius—which, in the expression of a passion, unites, mingles, and alternates so strangely with that amiable tenderness [Innigkeit] that the shifting image of the passion hardly leaves the draughtsman time to seize it firmly and securely, as he would fain do; even the position of the phrases is unusual. All this, however, would be ambiguous praise did not the spirit, which is both old and new, breathe through the new form and give it a soul.
I place these criticisms before the reader as historical documents, not as final decisions and examples of judicial wisdom. In fact, I accept neither the strictures of the one nor the sublimifications of the other, although the confident self-assertion of the former