Music Review from The Columbus Dispatch (copied with permission)

NOTE: The following review is reproduced here by Chamber Music Columbus as a public service with permission from the Columbus Dispatch. The views expressed by the reviewer do not necessarily reflect those of Chamber Music Columbus or its audience.

The Columbus Dispatch

 
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MUSIC REVIEW | CAVANI STRING QUARTET
SKILLED FILL-IN ENSEMBLE DOESN'T DISAPPOINT

 
Sunday, October 20, 2002
FEATURES - ACCENT & ARTS   05G

By Mary Hoffman
FOR THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

Yesterday evening at the Southern Theatre, the Cavani String Quartet opened the 55th anniversary season of the Columbus Chamber Music Society, stepping in after the Artemis String Quartet's last- minute cancellation to save the day and grace the night.

The audience was treated to works by Haydn, Bartok and Brahms that the Cavani played earlier in the week in Arkansas.

Faculty members at the Cleveland Institute of Music, violinists Annie Fullard and Mari Sato, violist Kirsten Docter, and cellist Merry Peckman are no strangers to Columbus. The prize-winning group has been warmly welcomed here on occasion since it was formed in 1984. Founding members Fullard and Peckman have academic ties to our city.

The finely conceived program provided a glance at the development of the string quartet, a demonstration of the particular demands of the chosen works, and the rewards of skillful, intelligent performance.

It was Haydn who set the string quartet on its modern course, emancipating it from its rococo limitations, injecting substance, utilizing counterpoint, introducing folk music, and expanding the role of the cello. From the six Sun Quartets of 1771-72, the Cavani opened the evening with a letter-perfect Quartet in D Major, Op. 20, No. 4 .

The Cavani turned then to the early 20th-century six by Bartok with their indebtedness to Haydn, but worlds apart. In the String Quartet No. 5, Bartok's highly original, complex musical language absorbing elements of Hungarian folk music is replete with irregular rhythms, complex contrapuntal lines and the employment of extreme performance techniques. The reading was riveting.

After the difficult, sometimes forbidding nature of the Bartok, the Brahms' String Quartet in C Minor, Op. 51, No. 1 brought a return to comfortable equilibrium. A deadline called before hearing it to completion, but there is no reason to suppose its performance wasn't consistent with what preceded.