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Program Notes
Takács Quartet
Saturday, December 8, 2007, 8:00 p.m.
Southern Theatre
Takács Quartet
Edward Dusinberre, violin
Károly Schranz, violin
Geraldine Walther, viola
András Fejér, cello
About
the Artists
Founded
in 1975 by four students at the Liszt Academy in Budapest, the Takács Quartet
garnered worldwide attention when it won both the First Prize and the Critics’
Prize at the International String Quartet Competition in Evian, France in 1977.
The next year, it took the Gold Medals at the Portsmouth and Bordeaux
competitions and the First Prize at the Budapest International String Quartet
Competition. The Takács was awarded the First Prize in the 1981
Bratislava Competition, and made its North American debut tour in 1982
Since 1983, it has held a Residency at the University of Colorado at
Boulder. It has also held a
residency at the Aspen Festival and its members have been Visiting Fellows at
the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London.
Beginning in the 2005-2006 season, the Takács will be Associate Artists
of London’s South Bank Centre. The
ensemble’s recording of the six Bartók quartets won the Gramophone “Chamber
Music Recording of the Year” award in 1998.
During January 2005, the Takács presented its six-concert traversal of
all of the Beethoven string quartets in New York’s Alice Tully Hall, to great
acclaim. The first volume (the
“middle quartets”) of the ensemble’s complete Beethoven cycle won the
Grammy Award for “Best Chamber Music Album,” the Gramophone “Chamber Music
Recording of the Year,” a Grammy nomination for “Best Classical Album,”
the Chamber Music America/WQXR Record Award, and the Japan Record Academy Award
for Chamber Music, all in 2002. The Takács Quartet was previously presented under the
auspices of Chamber Music Columbus in April 1999, October 2001, and April 2005.
The Takács
Quartet appears by arrangement with Seldy Cramer Artists and records for
Hyperion and Decca/London Records. For
additional information, the Web site of the Takács Quartet is www.takacsquartet.com.
Joseph
Haydn (born Rohrau, Austria, March 31, 1732; died Vienna, May 31, 1809)
Quartet in C
major, op. 74, no. 1 (H. III, 72) (composed 1793)
Allegro moderato
Andantino grazioso
Menuetto: Allegro
Finale: Vivace
Haydn's
employer, Prince Nicholas Esterházy, died in 1790, liberating him from the now
stultifying atmosphere of the palace at Eisenstadt. Very soon thereafter, in January 1791, the composer
accompanied the impresario Johann Peter Salomon to London for the first of two
triumphant visits to England. A
good deal of the period between the two journeys (June 1792 through February
1794) was spent composing works in a more "public" style, intended to
be presented at concerts in London during the 1794 season.
Among these compositions were six String
Quartets, opp. 71 and 74, known collectively as the Apponyi Quartets, because of their dedication to Count Anton Apponyi,
friend and patron of Haydn. These
works were not, strictly speaking, commissioned by Apponyi, who was a violinist
of no mean reputation. Rather, he
paid Haydn afterwards for the privilege of exclusive performing rights in Vienna
for a year.
Like
the London Symphonies (nos. 93-104) of
the same period, these quartets are less intimate than their predecessors.
Whereas previous quartets had been written literally as “chamber”
music for small audiences in small rooms, the Apponyi
Quartets were to be performed in large concert halls and had to command
listeners’ attention from the get go. No
subtle opening statements for these pieces.
Haydn
begins the Quartet in C major, op. 74, no.
1 with two loud chords, grabbing the audience by their collective ears as if
to say “Listen here.” This is
followed by an almost symphonically substantial first theme and by the
sonata-stretching development work embedded within the recapitulation.
The Andantino grazioso has the
flavor of a dignified formal dance. The
minuet is full of unusual touches that play with traditional rhythms, harmonies,
and symmetries. The key shift in
the trio of this movement is particularly distant for Haydn, and its rocking,
folksy tune has conjured thoughts of Schubert in more than one commentator. Even more folk-influenced is the Vivace finale, with another dance-like first theme and a droning
bass line in the second. As in the
first movement, there’s some development in the recap.
Papa Haydn may have intended this quartet for a larger than ordinary
audience, but perhaps that simply enlarged the humorous sparkle in his eye.
Béla
Bartók (born Nagy-szent-miklós, Hungary, March 25, 1881; died New York,
September 26, 1945)
Quartet
no. 5 (composed 1934)
Allegro
Adagio molto
Scherzo: Alla bulgarese; Trio
Andante
Finale: Allegro vivace
In
a single month (August 6 through September 6, 1934), Béla Bartók fulfilled a
commission of the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation with his Fifth
String Quartet. Written
quickly, but not carelessly. Like
the Fourth Quartet of 1928, the Fifth
is constructed in an “arch” form, where the first and fifth, and the second
and fourth movements are closely related, with the central third serving as the
keystone. Everywhere in evidence
are Bartók’s skills in development and counterpoint.
Strictly
speaking, none of Bartók’s quartets can be said to be “in” a particular
key. Rather, as Halsey Stevens has
put it, they are “on” a tonality, in this case, B-flat: “By this it is understood that these key-notes serve as
orientation points: that the music
is organized around them, modally or chromatically, freely fluctuating, using
the key-notes as points of departure and points of repose, affecting modulation
from and back to them.”
By
the insistent repetition of B-flat in the opening bars, Bartók establishes the
tonal center. From there, the viola
and cello state the violent first theme. A
fugitive passage, which never recurs, leads to a pulsing transitional theme
derived from the first. All three
aspects of that first theme frolic in the development, after which the recap
reverses the order of the exposition and inverts the themes.
The
second and fourth movements are almost identically structured.
Both begin uncertainly, the second with fragments and trills in the
violin, the fourth with pizzicato glissandi.
Passages of Bartókian “night music” constitute the midsections of
both. In the second movement, the
return of the opening section is shortened and in the fourth, disguised until
the very end.
Between
these are the syncopated Bulgarian rhythms of the Scherzo; the muted violin ostinato and the viola’s folk tune mark
the trio. With an introduction
related to the coda of the opening movement, the finale uses that movement as
its touchstone. Its theme is a free
inversion of the first movement’s and, like that movement, it reverses
thematic order in the recap. Full
of madcap contrapuntal effects, the finale is suddenly interrupted by a
comically out-of-tune little polka, “Allegro con indifferenza,” before the
quartet redoubles its efforts to the end.
Johannes
Brahms (born Hamburg, May 7, 1833; died Vienna, April 3, 1897)
Quartet
in C minor, op. 51, no. 1 (composed 1865-1873)
Allegro
Romanze:
Poco adagio
Allegretto
molto moderato e comodo
Allegro
Beethoven’s
shadow hovered over him so oppressively that as many as twenty string quartets
were written and destroyed before Brahms allowed the pair we know as Opus
51 to be published in 1873. By
some accounts, he’d already spent as many as twenty years working on this Quartet
in C minor. But we know for
sure that his friend, the violinist Joseph Joachim had inquired about Brahms’s
progress on the work in 1865, and that in 1869, Brahms sent Clara Schumann the
first and final movements for her comments.
In
the autumn of 1872, Brahms had reluctantly accepted the artistic directorship of
the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna. Accustomed to devoting
springs and summers to his own composition, he had found this burden to be
interfering with his creative energies, so by 1875, he had resigned the post.
During his summer 1873 retreat in Tutzing on the Starnberger See in Upper
Bavaria, however, he finally completed the two Minor
Quartets, dedicated to a Viennese surgeon and violinist, Theodore Billroth.
In December, the Hellmesberger Quartet performed the premiere of Op. 51, no. 1, in Vienna.
A
tumultuous rising phrase with dotted rhythms followed by a more gentle falling
phrase constitutes the opening theme and affords a foretaste of the finale.
The violins play a second theme over a lightning viola motif.
The second movement Romanze
recalls the first movement’s main theme, but now in A-flat major and more
intimate than grand. A second even
more meditative B section is followed by the opening’s return and a coda that
revisits both themes.
The
first violin and viola vie for supremacy in the contrapuntal scherzo.
The trio (Un poco piů animato) is a contrasting waltz.
Listen for the second violin’s little trick called “bariolage,”
where the same note sounds on two strings, creating a special sort of tremolo.
The first movement’s main theme returns, after a fashion, as the
spirited signature of the Allegro
finale. A passionate second subject
and a more laid-back third in the second violin follow.
All three return for the involved coda.
--Program
notes by Jay Weitz, Senior Consulting Database Specialist for music, OCLC Online
Computer Library Center, Dublin, Ohio. He
is a contributing performing arts critic for the weekly alternative newspaper Columbus
Alive (http://www.columbusalive.com)
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