The expansive length of Morton Feldman’s Trio (1 hr., 45 min., 22  sec.) requires a new approach to listening, which takes scale, the  physical experience of sound, and novel uses of musical memory into  consideration. With his delicate manipulation of musical materials,  Feldman blurs the listener’s sense of time as their musical memory  struggles to distinguish between past and present sounds - listeners are  free to lose themselves in the beauty of each musical moment.
 Aki Takahashi and Rohan de Saram (formerly of the Arditti Quartet)  both worked closely with Feldman. Marc Sabat is among today’s great  Feldman interpreters, having recorded Feldman’s complete music for violin & piano on Mode.
 Available as a specially priced 2-CD set or complete on a single DVD  with full video and extras. This is the only readily available  performance of the Trio available in the U.S.A.
 Original recording in superb 96khz, 24-bit sonics. Two very distinct  mixes were made for the surround and stereo versions. The natural  reflected hall sound - which would typically be in the rear surround  speakers - is not very dramatic because of the basically quiet nature of  the Trio. Instead, for the surround mix, we chose to place the  listener in an intimate perspective with the musicians: directly  between the violin and the cello, with the piano in front. For the  stereo mix, the violin and piano are clearly separated left and right to  accentuate their interplay. Feldman’s use of extended string techniques  can blur the timbral separation between cello and violin, creating  unified sonic events exploring the qualities and possibilities of the  combination of instruments - for example, utilizing the resonance of the  piano and the sustaining qualities and dynamic control of the strings.  These subtle nuances are brought out by the detail of the recording.
 Detailed essay on the work by Sabine Feisst included in the booklet.