Milestones give the cello a chance to impress
The Sydney Morning Herald - 16 May, 2009
The Sydney Morning Herald - 16 May, 2009
TrioZ celebrates two momentous bicentenary milestones
The Age - 16 May, 2009
The Age - 16 May, 2009
Selby and Friends
The Age - 14 March, 2009
The Age - 14 March, 2009
Power Packed
Adelaide Advertiser - November, 2008
Adelaide Advertiser - November, 2008
One & Only
The Age - 1 November, 2008
The Age - 1 November, 2008
Masters of Melody
The Age - July 4 , 2008
The Age - July 4 , 2008
Power of three made stronger by old hand
Sydney Morning Herald July 3 , 2008
Sydney Morning Herald July 3 , 2008
A sound approach
Adelaide Advertiser July 2 , 2008
Adelaide Advertiser July 2 , 2008
TRIOZ on song despite forced program change
The Age April 14 , 2008
The Age April 14 , 2008
TRIOZ recital triumph
The Manly Daily - Stepping Out April 11 , 2008
The Manly Daily - Stepping Out April 11 , 2008
Top Trios with TRIOZ
Canberra Times April 10 , 2008
Canberra Times April 10 , 2008
TRIOZ
Herald Sun February 27, 2008
Herald Sun February 27, 2008
Selby & Friends
The Age February 22, 2008
The Age February 22, 2008
Three explore the brilliance and lushness of the dour side
Sydney Morning Herald February 21, 2008
Sydney Morning Herald February 21, 2008
Crowd Pleaser produced without adventure
Canberra Times February 21, 2008
Canberra Times February 21, 2008
Adelaide Advertiser
Rodney Smith | Wednesday 2 July, 2008
I heard TRIOZ just under a year ago, not long after their launch, and they have undergone a miraculous transformation. We now have genuine dialogue between the players in an atmosphere of real equality, with dynamic pianist Kathy Selby almost reinventing herself in the process.
Her old group, the Macquarie Trio, were a pretty volcanic lot and TRIOZ, with lashings of finesse, is almost the opposite.
Selby’s playing, while losing none of its brilliance, has toned down remarkably and fitted the refined styles of violinist Niki Vasilakis and cellist Julian Smiles to a tee.
Most memorable were a marvellously idiomatic performance of Dvorak’s evergreen Dumky Trio and an expansively dramatic reading of the final Allegro Molto of Schubert’s doom-laden, yet defiant Eb Trio Op.100.
A hallmark of the new TRIOZ approach is their willingness to make space within a movement for quieter reflective moments. Fire and brimstone there may be, but during the breathless pianissimi in the Dumky, time seemed to stand still as passages moved to dark contemplations from frantic activity. Similarly in the Schubert, Smiles’s handling of the two highly charged, reminiscent returns of the Funeral March theme were delivered with moving simplicity and depth.
Smiles was a ring-in for permanent cellist Emma-Jane Murphy.
If TRIOZ has been able to morph into so empathetic an ensemble with changing personnel, it will be fascinating to see what happens when Murphy returns.
Rodney Smith | Wednesday 2 July, 2008
A sound approach
I heard TRIOZ just under a year ago, not long after their launch, and they have undergone a miraculous transformation. We now have genuine dialogue between the players in an atmosphere of real equality, with dynamic pianist Kathy Selby almost reinventing herself in the process.
Her old group, the Macquarie Trio, were a pretty volcanic lot and TRIOZ, with lashings of finesse, is almost the opposite.
Selby’s playing, while losing none of its brilliance, has toned down remarkably and fitted the refined styles of violinist Niki Vasilakis and cellist Julian Smiles to a tee.
Most memorable were a marvellously idiomatic performance of Dvorak’s evergreen Dumky Trio and an expansively dramatic reading of the final Allegro Molto of Schubert’s doom-laden, yet defiant Eb Trio Op.100.
A hallmark of the new TRIOZ approach is their willingness to make space within a movement for quieter reflective moments. Fire and brimstone there may be, but during the breathless pianissimi in the Dumky, time seemed to stand still as passages moved to dark contemplations from frantic activity. Similarly in the Schubert, Smiles’s handling of the two highly charged, reminiscent returns of the Funeral March theme were delivered with moving simplicity and depth.
Smiles was a ring-in for permanent cellist Emma-Jane Murphy.
If TRIOZ has been able to morph into so empathetic an ensemble with changing personnel, it will be fascinating to see what happens when Murphy returns.











