Enso String Quartet
Transcription
Enso String Quartet
© Robert Catto | www.catto.co.nz | All rights reserved Welcome Thank you for joining us this evening for the culmination of our 2012 concert season. It’s our pleasure to cap off this year with a collaboration between a dynamic young ensemble based in New York, Enso String Quartet, and Michael Endres, a wonderful German pianist based in Christchurch. Much of the music will be very familiar to you, ranging from the Classical and Rococo periods through to twentieth century works. Tonight’s programme also includes a brand new work, No stars, not even clouds, written especially for the Enso Quartet by Dame Gillian Karawe Whitehead. We wish to acknowledge and thank the Springload Web Design team who have supported our work and dreams over the past decade. If you haven’t already done so, please admire their work on our website, www.chambermusic.co.nz. Enjoy, and we look forward to seeing you all again in the New Year! Euan Murdoch Chief Executive, Chamber Music New Zealand Programme Haydn Quartet in C Opus 20 No 2 Page 4 Debussy String Quartet in G minor Page 5 INTERVAL Gillian Whitehead No stars, not even clouds ... Page 7 Shostakovich Piano Quintet in G minor Opus 57 Page 9 CHRISTCHURCH 23 OCTOBER AUCKLAND 29 OCTOBER NEW PLYMOUTH 26 OCTOBER PALMERSTON NORTH 1 NOVEMBER INVERCARGILL 7 NOVEMBER The Auckland concert will be broadcast live by Radio NZ Concert Please respect the music, the musicians, and your fellow audience members, by switching off all cellphones, pagers and watches. Taking photographs, or sound or video recordings during the concert is strictly prohibited unless with the prior approval of Chamber Music New Zealand. Enso String Quartet Maureen Nelson violin John Marcus violin Stephanie Fong viola Richard Belcher cello with Kaleidoscopes 2012 Michael Endres piano 2. The Enso String Quartet has had an impressive career since it was formed in 1999 at Yale University, where Maureen Nelson and Richard Belcher were studying. The group won the Concert Artists Guild International Competition in 2003, and was a prizewinner at the Banff International String Quartet Competition in 2004. A regular touring schedule sees them performing in many of the major concert halls throughout the USA, including Carnegie Hall, the Lincoln Center and the Library of Congress, and after this visit to New Zealand they will be a quartet in residence at the Huntington Estate Music Festival in Australia. Members of the Enso String Quartet are keen teachers, and have developed programmes for young people of all ages. They have held residencies at Northern Illinois University alongside the Vermeer Quartet, and at Rice University, where they lectured in string quartet playing. The Quartet has a strong interest in contemporary music, and has premièred works by leading composers The Quartet’s first two solo recordings, released in 2005-6, were a set of quartets by Pleyel and received rave reviews. A 2009 CD of Ginastera quartets was selected as a Recording of the Year by MusicWeb International and nominated for a 2010 Grammy award. Michael Endres has been a Professor of Piano at Canterbury University since 2009, and also has an international career as a solo pianist. A graduate of the Juilliard School, he has won numerous prizes in Europe, and his recordings have won the Diapason d’Or three times. He has been invited to perform at major festivals throughout the world, and has worked with chamber music partners such as the baritone Hermann Prey, and the Artemis and Fine Arts String Quartets. His 27 CDs include music by Schubert, Weber, Schumann and most recently Gershwin. Enso String Quartet with Michael Endres including Joan Tower. In 2009 they received a Chamber Music America Commissioning Grant to work with the composer Kurt Stallman on his new quartet Following Franz, Now, which was premièred in 2011. 3. Joseph Haydn Born Rohrau, Lower Austria, 31 March 1732 | Died Vienna, 31 May 1809 Quartet in C Opus 20 No 2 Moderato Capriccio: Adagio Minuetto: Allegretto Fuga a quattro soggetti Although Haydn did not invent the string quartet, he was largely responsible for developing and popularising the genre in the late 18th century. His string quartets were written over a span of nearly 50 years of his creative life, and demonstrate Haydn’s extraordinary growth as a composer and his influence in the musical world. Kaleidoscopes 2012 By 1772, when the six Opus 20 Quartets were completed, Haydn had been in the service of the imperial Esterhazy family for more than ten years. As Kapellmeister, he was responsible for the music and instruments of the household, and for composing whatever his employer Prince Nikolaus might require. This was mostly orchestral works, operas and oratorios, and there is no record of string quartets actually being performed at the court. The terms of Haydn’s contract forbade him from composing for other patrons or publishing music without permission, but despite these limitations his international reputation blossomed from the late 1760s. 4. The Opus 20 set became known as the ‘Sun quartets’ due to a picture on the front of the first publication, and they are in many ways the dawn of a new era in string quartet composition. Haydn departs from the convention of the time by giving each instrument a relatively equal role in the texture, exemplified by his use of the cello to open the Quartet in C. He was also influenced by the new ‘Sturm und Drang’ [storm and stress] movement, which sought to portray extremes of emotion through music and literature, in contrast to the ‘rational’ approach typical of the late Baroque and early Classical period. This new style can be heard to good effect in the impassioned development section of the first movement of this Quartet, as well as the slow second movement, which opens with a solemn unison statement in C minor. In contrast to the usual courtly dance form, the Minuetto draws on the sound of folk instruments, with its drone-like texture, though the central trio section is more conventional in style. For the final movement, Haydn turns to the contrapuntal techniques of an earlier time with a double fugue. While clearly another expression of instrumental equality in the Quartet, the use of a more ‘learned’ style was another demonstration of Haydn’s rejection of the lighter and simpler ‘Galante’ style that had prevailed for the past forty years. Claude Debussy Born St Germain-en-Laye, 22 August 1862 | Died Paris, 25 March 1918 String Quartet in G minor Opus 10 Animé et très décidé Assez vif et bien rythmé Andantino, doucement Très modéré The String Quartet in G minor Opus 10 is unique among Debussy’s works because it is the only time he mentions a key or opus number. Completed in February 1893, it was first performed by the Ysaÿe Quartet in December that year. The work was considered a success and became a model for Ravel’s famous Quartet a decade later. But critics at the time found it puzzling and his close friend and fellow composer Chausson was very disappointed by it, causing Debussy considerable distress. He planned a second quartet to try and ease Chausson’s disappointment, but that never eventuated. Although based in the key of G minor, many of Debussy’s themes are modal and the tonality is treated with the utmost flexibility. He makes extensive use of whole tone scales, which are one of his most distinctive stylistic features. Pentatonic (five note) scales also make an appearance, particularly in the coda to the first movement, which is marked ‘animated and very purposefully’. The colourful scherzo, Assez vif et très rythmé [‘quite lively and very rhythmic’] uses pizzicato as its basis, to form varied textures. The slow Andantino, doucement [‘quite slowly, sweetly’] is more lyrical and shows some Russian influence in its sombre mood. By contrast, the Très modéré [‘at a very moderate pace’] finale is turbulent and chromatic. Following a brief respite in the middle, the music builds to a triumphant restatement of the main theme from the beginning of the work. Enso String Quartet with Michael Endres From the time he was student at the Paris Conservatoire, Debussy began to challenge the accepted contemporary Wagnerian compositional style that constantly stretched harmonic boundaries, preferring to use ‘illegal’ sequences of chords to create sound-pictures: “The only rule I admit is the rule that involves pleasing a musician’s ear”. His quiet revolution against late-Romanticism had a profound effect on music in the 20th century and beyond, allowing sounds and textures to be enjoyed for their own sake rather than for their place in the flow of harmony. 5. Encore, CMNZ's Supporter Programme, provides many ways of gifting your support to ensure the continued vitality of chamber music in New Zealand. We thank all contributors for their generous support. For more information about Encore, visit www.chambermusic.co.nz/support-us Want to hear more of the Enso String Quartet? Try the other programme! Boccherini Quartet in G minor Opus 32 No 5 Ginastera Quartet No 1 Opus 20 Gillian Whitehead No stars, not even clouds ... Dvořák Piano Quintet in A Opus 81 Wellington 25 October | Hamilton 28 October Napier 31 October | Nelson 3 November Dunedin 5 November Or listen out for the broadcast by Radio NZ Concert Gillian Karawe Whitehead Born Whangarei, 23 April 1941 No stars, not even clouds ... In 2000 the Arts Foundation of New Zealand named her as one of five inaugural Arts Laureates and her numerous other accolades include three SOUNZ Contemporary Awards, an Honorary Doctorate from Victoria University (2003) and being made a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (2008). As the inaugural composer at the Lilburn Residence in Wellington, she was the subject of a documentary that screened on TV One in 2006, and in 2010 a biography of her, ‘Moon, Tides and Shoreline’ by Noel Sanders, was published. The composer writes: I wrote this piece at a time when several friends were seriously ill, and at the forefront of my mind. Juanita Ketchel, who lived in Dunedin, was both diagnosed with cancer and died within the short time-frame in which the piece was written. A writer and oral historian, she had a profound interest in the arts and was frequently seen at Chamber Music New Zealand concerts; the title, No stars, not even clouds, comes from a story she wrote some years ago. The piece is written to her memory. The piece draws on traditional quartet forms, opening with a phrase which I realised only retrospectively echoes the same shape and rhythm that pervades Torua, written for violin and piano in the immediate aftermath of the February 2011 earthquake in Christchurch. Both pieces draw on the Otago accent of the korimako or bellbirds that seem to sing vociferously every time I sit down to write. No stars, not even clouds is written in a single movement, but has elements of a tripartite structure within it. No stars, not even clouds is dedicated to the wonderful players of the Enso Quartet, for whom the piece was commissioned by Chamber Music New Zealand. Enso String Quartet with Michael Endres Gillian Whitehead is widely recognised as one of the most important composers working in Australasia. She grew up in a musical family in Whangarei and studied music in Auckland and Wellington before undertaking postgraduate study at the University of Sydney, and in London with Peter Maxwell Davies. After 14 years in Europe working as a freelance composer, she taught at the University of Sydney from 1981-96, with significant breaks to concentrate on composition. 7. Sign up to our e-newsletter In The Loop and stay in touch with what is happening at Chamber Music New Zealand. You’ll get the scoop on who’s touring where & when and up to date news on all CMNZ related happenings, including the NZCT Chamber Music Contest and schools outreach initiatives. www.chambermusic.co.nz/in-the-loop Live chamber music is at its best when shared between friends. If you're under 35, enjoy evenings out with great company and great music then The Guest List is for you. It is a way to experience live chamber music with like minded people and it's free to join. You'll be set up to receive special offers, discounts, meet ups and opportunities to get behind the scenes with our artists and VIPs for concerts in your area. www.chambermusic.co.nz/the-guest-list @chambermusicnz | facebook.com/chambermusicnz Dmitri Shostakovich Born St Petersburg, 25 September 1906 | Died Moscow, 9 August 1975 Piano Quintet in G minor Opus 57 Shostakovich was a child prodigy, and began studying at the Petrograd Conservatory at the age of 13. He wrote his First Symphony as a graduation piece when he was 19, then embarked on a career as both pianist and composer. During the following decade he wrote three more symphonies, his first piano concerto, three ballets, several film scores, and two operas - The Nose and Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk. He was highly regarded within the Soviet Union, and Lady Macbeth was regarded as a “major achievement of Socialist construction”, performing to packed houses for two years. In 1936, however, an article in Pravda suddenly attacked the work, describing it as “fidgety, screaming and neurotic”. The reasons behind this unprecedented assault are unclear, but Stalin’s second ‘Five Year Plan’ to strengthen the country’s economy was resulting in violent oppression and starvation. The Soviet people, though, were told that their lives were happy, and artists were expected to produce works that supported this image. Lady Macbeth, with its negative portrayal of the idle bourgeoisie, clearly did not fit the current political view. The criticism shocked Shostakovich and he became extremely circumspect for the rest of his life, avoiding overt political content and modifying his musical language to try and avoid being considered ‘modernist’. His Fifth Symphony of 1937, reportedly written as “a Soviet artist’s creative response to justified criticism”, brought him back into favour with the government - at least temporarily. The Piano Quintet was written and premièred in 1940 and Shostakovich received a Stalin Prize for it the following year. An impassioned opening statement on the piano is answered by the strings, and followed by a lengthy reflective section. The movement closes with a return to the opening material and moves straight into the Fugue, which grows in emotional intensity and then returns to a reflective mood. The Scherzo begins with a flat-footed exuberance in the strings, with the lighter piano dancing around them. Its simplicity seems somewhat ironic in the context. A singing violin melody, accompanied by plodding pizzicato in the cello, introduces the Intermezzo, and these two ideas are exchanged between the piano and strings during the movement. The Finale begins gently, but develops into a march-like piece, full of scintillating piano textures. Enso String Quartet with Michael Endres Prelude: Lento ~ Fugue: Adagio Scherzo: Allegretto Intermezzo: Lento ~ Finale: Allegretto 9. KALEIDOSCOPES 2013 Chamber Music New Zealand’s Concert Season featuring KRONOS QUARTET | GALVANISED with Diedre Irons (piano) NZTRIO | TOKYO STRING QUARTET | BEETHOVEN reCYCLE (Michael Houstoun performs Beethoven’s 32 piano sonatas) EINSTEIN’S UNIVERSE (Featuring UK violinist Jack Liebeck) GOLDNER STRING QUARTET with Piers Lane (piano) THE TALLIS SCHOLARS SEASON SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE NOW | INDIVIDUAL TICKETS ON SALE 26 NOVEMBER MUSIC TEACHER & SCHOOL OFFERS Full Year Subscription: Entitles entry to each concert in the 2013 Kaleidoscopes season for 1 teacher and 9 school-age students for $3 each per concert. Available from 1st November 2012. 5 for 25 Single Concert Tickets: Just $25 gets 1 teacher and 4 of school-age students into any 1 CMNZ concert Season concert ($5 per extra student). Booking must be received no later than 2 weeks in advance of the concert date. Available from 1st November 2012. FOR A SEASON BROCHURE OR TO BOOK YOUR TICKETS PHONE THE NATIONAL OFFICE ON 0800 CONCERT (266 2378) www.chambermusic.co.nz Board Chair, Peter Diessl, Paul Baines, Michelle van Gaalen, Roger King, Helen Philpott, Gretchen La Roche, Lloyd Williams. 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Level 4, 75 Ghuznee Street PO Box 6238, Wellington Tel (04) 384 6133 Fax (04) 384 3773 info@chambermusic.co.nz www.chambermusic.co.nz /ChamberMusicNZ For all Concerts Managers phone 0800 CONCERT (266 2378) Regional Presenters Blenheim, Cromwell, Gisborne, Gore, Hutt Valley, Kaitaia, Morrinsville, Motueka, Rotorua, Taihape, Tauranga, Te Awamutu, Tokoroa, Upper Hutt, Waikanae, Waimakariri, Waipukurau, Wanaka, Wanganui, Warkworth, Wellington, Whakatane and Whangarei. © Chamber Music New Zealand 2012 No part of this programme may be reproduced without the prior permission of Chamber Music New Zealand. 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