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(GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass., May 31, 2009) – Close Encounters with Music
(CEWM) concluded its 2008-2009 series with the second of two programs
devoted to Felix Mendelssohn, on the occasion of his 250th anniversary, and
Mendelssohn’s little known protégé, Eduard Franck, whose String Sextet in E-
flat major, Op. 41, was given its American performance premiere yesterday at
the Mahaiwe.
CEWM’s Mendelssohn programs have also included works by others in his
musical orbit, including Robert and Clara Schumann, and Mendelssohn’s
sister, Fanny Mendelssohn Hensel, adding an essential degree of context with
which to understand and appreciate his work and the work of Franck.
A sequence of Variations Concertantes for Cello and Piano, performed by
CEWM artistic director Yehuda Hanani and James Tocco, respectively, began
the evening, providing the musical baseline from which all other works heard
would deviate.
Mendelssohn’s finely ordered lyricism was readily apparent, as was the
influence of Johannes Sebastian Bach, whose reputation at the time of
Mendelssohn’s writing was in eclipse, but for whom Mendelssohn was
responsible for fostering a wholesale revival in interest.
But this wasn’t mere recapitulation: while Mendelssohn may have had one
foot in the mathematical precision of Bach’s composition, his other was
leading toward Romanticism and even beyond – in Tocco’s more
freewheeling, syncopated passages, one heard glimpses of ragtime yet to
come.
The forward-looking nature of much of the music played was to emerge as a
theme, accidental or otherwise, of the evening. In the same variations,
Hanani’s pizzicato duet with Tocco also had a jazzy syncopation, although his
bow work boasted an appropriately parched, period feel.
Tocco tackled a set of solo piano pieces by the Mendelssohn siblings; Fanny’s
in particular were fleet and athletic. Unfortunately, and by no fault of Tocco,
these solo pieces were marred by unfortunately resonant and sustained high
tones in the piano that apparently were feeding back into a p.a. system that
also sent out a continuous low-level buzz throughout the evening that
impeded the appreciation of softer, quieter passages.
Schumann’s Piano Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 47, was a vibrant display of
Romanticism that even foreshadowed modernism, particularly in the Andante
cantabile movement.
Schumann also may have been the patron saint of art rock; his orchestrations
for four parts, featuring Tocco, Hanani, violinist Yehonatan Berick and violist
Anthony Debroye, could easily be transcribed for a rock quartet, and its
influence on acts ranging from the Beatles to the Electric Light Orchestra and
Randy Newman was transparently clear.
The quartet packed organic peaks and valleys and ebbs and flows that passed
effortlessly among the soloists, who were especially empathetic in their
voicings.
After intermission, the Avalon String Quartet joined Hanani and Berick to
perform the Sextet by Franck. As played, the piece demonstrated Franck’s
strengths and weaknesses. He was an incredibly forward-thinking composer,
using Eastern European and Middle Eastern modalities, sometimes with a
Gypsy feel, while maintaining his Central European roots.
His music drew more on folk than did Mendelssohn and Schumann, an
approach composers would continue to explore for the next two hundred
years.
The form of the sextet allowed for greater color and depth to the music, and
Franck more liberally allowed tempos to vary. The players responded by
elongating lines to allow them to breathe more organically, a far cry from
Mendelssohn’s Bach-derived clockwork. In Franck’s Andante movement,
some of his passages portended the Minimalism of 150 years hence in their
heavy use of chromaticism and staccato repetition.
By the onset of the third movement, the Scherzo, however, Franck’s
limitations had grown readily apparent. As was the case with his Piano Trio,
performed earlier in February, Franck lacked a strong, driving narrative of the
sort that characterized the work of the Mendelssohns and Schumann.
The enthusiasm of the players, however, powered the piece in spite of its lack
of a major, coherent statement, and it was a joy to see the esprit de corps
among them, taking great pleasure in each other’s work as they
communicated through nods, smiles, and musical gestures that
acknowledged what each was saying.
Seth Rogovoy is Berkshire Living’s editor-in-chief and award-winning critic-
at-large.
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