We were offered a telling reminder of precocious talent when the three young musicians stepped onto the stage.

Timothy Ridout (viola) informed us the Schubert one-movement fragment from the projected String Trio In B Flat Major was written when the composer was their age – a mere 19.

Bizarrely all bearing the first name Tim or Timothy, the Teyber Trio began their career together in 2010 after meeting at the Royal Academy Of Music.

One can only guess it’s been plain sailing from then on as they confidently dispatched Schubert’s dabbling in the trio form.

After this, it was down to Mozart to really show how it’s done with his Divertimento In E Flat Major – “possibly the greatest work in the trio repertoire” according to Ridout in his introduction.

He wasn’t kidding and the musicians showed they were adept at expressing the often fragile and delicate music.

There was the odd moment of hesitancy but by the time we reached the mid-way point the colourful dialogue between the instruments was in full swing, with Tim Crawford’s violin standing out.

It was a marathon effort that hardly paused for breath right up to the final confident flourish.

Three stars