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"Belcea Quartet & Friends"

30 October and  1 November 2004

Wigmore Hall, London

 

 

Ann Murray

Simon Keenlyside

Conductor : Paul Kildea

 

Belcea Quartet:

Corina Belcea (violin)

Laura Samuel (violin)

Krzysztof Chorzelski, (viola)

Alasdair Tait (cello)


& Friends:
Emily Beynon (flute)

Christopher Cowie (oboe)

Matthew Hunt (clarinet)

Ursula Leveaux (bassoon)

Martin Owen (horn)

Colin Currie (percussion)

Lindy Tennent-Brown (harmonium)

Corin Long (double bass)

 

Mendelssohn : String Quartet in F  (Belcea Quartet)

 

Samuel Barber : Dover Beach (Simon Keenlyside + Belcea Quartet)

 

Gustav Mahler : Songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn  -  A World premiere of arrangement by James Olsen for voices plus chamber ensemble (Ann Murray, Simon Keenlyside and chamber ensemble)

   -   Revelge  SK

   -   Das irdische Leben  AM

   -   Verlor'ne Müh   AM / SK

   -   Der Tamboursg'sell   SK

   -   Urlicht   AM

   -   Des Antonius von Padua Fischpredigt   SK

   -   Lied des Verfolgten im Turm   SK / AM

   -   Wer hat dies Liedlein erdacht   AM

   -   Lob des hohen Verstandes   SK

   -   Rheinlegendchen   AM

   -   Der Schildwache Nachtlied   SK / AM

   -   Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen   AM

 

 

What the critics say

 

 

Tom Service for The Guardian, Monday November 1, 2004

http://www.guardian.co.uk/arts/reviews/story/0,,1340501,00.html

Three star rating   

“There were moments of deft characterisation and drama from baritone Simon Keenlyside and soprano Ann Murray, such as Keenlyside's innocence in the song of the drummer boy being led to his execution, with a chilling accompaniment of a side-drum and a cortege of woodwind chords. He created a vocal bestiary in a song about a singing competition between a cuckoo and a nightingale, presided over by a braying donkey.”

 

“Keenlyside stole the show in the first half, with a searing performance of Barber's Dover Beach, accompanied by the Belcea Quartet. After the power of the final climax, describing the hopelessness of life, the music subsided with a hollow viola line. There was more insight in this 10-minute song than in the whole of the Belcea's performance of Mendelssohn's E minor string quartet Op 44 No 2, which for all its sonic power was an exercise in technical brilliance rather than musical sensitivity.”

 

 

Anne Ozorio for Seen and Heard

Mendelssohn, Barber, Mahler, Ann Murray (soprano), Simon Keenlyside (baritone), The Belcea Quartet and friends, Paul Kildea (conductor), Wigmore Hall, 30th October 2004 (AO)

The Wigmore Hall is entering a new era. Along with the new décor, there’s new management and new programming. The venue’s unique reputation rests on the quality of its programme and performers. Its core audience come for state of the art musical excellence. This creates a formidable chicken and egg situation: standards have to be exceptional so it retains a cutting edge over other, larger venues.

 

The Belcea Quartet, resident at the Wigmore Hall since 2001, symbolise the venue’s spirit: a youthful but spectacularly good group with an affinity for imaginative material. They brought to Mendelssohn’s String Quartet in E minor a bracing vivacity. The tight precision of the playing in the second movement hurtled along with a sharp sense of pace.

 

The Belcea are noted, too, for working with singers, bridging the worlds of song and chamber music. Barber’s Dover Beach, with Simon Keenlyside showed just how fertile this partnership can be. Keenlyside is singing better than ever, and in his early forties he has matured without losing the freshness and imagination he is respected for. His voice, always deep, powerful and dramatic, is ideally suited to this piece. Barber follows the unusual lines of Arnold’s poem with intelligence: “ the tide is full, the moon lies fair/upon the straits: on the French coast the light/ Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand/ Glimm’ring and vast, out in the tranquil bay.” It adds to the mysterious effect of ocean and moonlight transforming a familiar scene. Keenlyside’s clear appreciation of these musical undercurrents brought out the effects acutely. His colouring of the sea imagery was so masterful that when the music called for a sudden change, “Come to the window”, his shift to a lighter timbre was even more expressive.

 

Barber’s evocation of the ebb and flow of the tides is sophisticated, but Keenlyside and the Belcea made it sound natural and organic. “Listen! you hear the grating roar/ Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling/ At their return, up the high strand/ Begin, and cease, and then again begin,/ With tremulous cadence slow, and bring/ The eternal; note of silence in.” Punctuation in a poem matters, and music reinforces it deliberately. Seldom have I heard performers tackle Barber’s pregnant silences so sensitively. This was a sophisticated interpretation, its understated emotional power all the more profound. The final stanza with its intense anguish and uncertainty seems shockingly relevant to our times, more so perhaps than when Arnold wrote the lines a hundred years ago. Keenlyside’s vocal authority made the final crescendo chilling: seldom has this music sounded so profound. “And we are here as on a darkling plain/ Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,/ Where ignorant armies clash by night.” This truly was a performance to remember, the sort of exceptional, mould-shattering music making that the Wigmore Hall is all about.

This season opened with the much-advertised “Murray-Mahler Festival”, wonderful publicity because Ann Murray is one of the big names in British music, literally a “Dame Commander of the British Empire.” It’s a lovely idea to honour her, much loved for her triumphs in opera, particularly Handel and Mozart. She was also a founder of the Songmaker’s Almanac in its glory days with Graham Johnson, Felicity Lott and Anthony Rolfe Johnson. Her celebrity puts a glossy shine on the season, even though selling seats is not an issue at this venue, when queues for sell-outs are the norm.

The Series started with the Schoenberg-Riehn transcription of Das Lied von der Erde and continued with a specially commissioned new transcription of songs from Mahler’s Des Knaben Wunderhorn. Very high profile indeed. Yet, not a word in the programme notes as to why a new transcription is needed, and what it has to offer. Schoenberg’s transcription was made because it was part of his methods of teaching composers to analyse the essentials in what was then “new music.” The Society for Private Performance was private – audiences were positively discouraged and the sessions had nothing to do with expanding public awareness. Quite the contrary, for they were for musicians studying compositional processes. Rainer Riehn’s completion of Schoenberg’s outlines was commissioned for the Mahler Festival at Toblach, where it was scrutinised by some of the sharpest minds in Mahler studies. It is a distinctive work where the refinement of textures brings details into different focus from the original orchestration. As such, it’s useful in the way Schoenberg intended.

 

But why transcribe these Wunderhorn songs? Perhaps, like mountains that are climbed “because they are there”, it might be felt that a midway between the piano and orchestral versions might be handy. The Wigmore Hall’s educational workshops are excellent, and part of its reputation. In the session which mentioned the new transcriptions, mention was made of Mahler’s compositional style being “chamber like” in his use of groups of instruments. Indeed, the eminent Donald Mitchell and others have highlighted Mahler’s “Kammermusikton”. Riehn has also transcribed Kindertotenlieder for chamber, for those songs were written around the time Mahler was writing about “Kammermusikton”. Song was most definitely part of Mahler’s symphonic vision. Erwin Stein’s transcription of the Fourth Symphony, done for the Schoenberg group, was an attempt to bring the “song” element in the symphony to prominence. Schoenberg wrote a chamber version of Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen which attempts to bridge the piano and orchestral versions and have regard to the First Symphony. Transcriptions are interesting when they show a certain musical logic, or, as in the case of Luciano Berio’s orchestrations of Mahler’s early songs, they bring the creativity of a major musical mind towards understanding the originals. Forgive me this digression, for it puts into context my reaction to the new transcription. James Olsen, the composer, graduated from Cambridge in 2003, and has had his works played at Aldeburgh, Huddersfield, Prague and Klangspuren. He’s worked with Wolfgang Rihm and Julian Anderson, and is currently studying for a Masters degree in London.

 

Keenlyside was excellent in Revelge, and Der Tambourg’sell, dramatic songs, his voice did great things for. His singing distracted me, for I was trying to listen to the orchestration. Ann Murray retains much of the beauty of her voice, and her technique is firm, so her performance came out well, if somewhat lacking in characterisation. Olsen uses twelve musicians, so the Belcea Quartet was tripled by other very good performers including Emily Beynon and the pianist Lindy Tennent-Brown, here playing harmonium. Some of the songs are presented as duets, even Verlor’ne Müh, where the baritone simply makes interjections, as indicated in the text. In Lied des Verfolgten im Turm, the duet effect is charming, though it loses the double meanings in Mahler’s settings. But this is Olsen’s version, not Mahler’s, so fair enough. As to the overall impact of this new arrangement, it is hard to be definitive on only one hearing, particularly when the scores cannot be compared. There wasn’t anything drastically different in terms of basic forms, just “less” than in the full orchestration. Most noticeable for me was the thinness of the percussion, which in Mahler is important not only for sound but for symbolism. In Mahler’s piano version, the piano makes up in sonority for the absence of other instruments, so the issue doesn’t arise. In a chamber version, perhaps the full blast orchestration would have been too dominant. Yet, muted drum rolls seem a halfway compromise that doesn’t satisfy. Similarly, bassoon and horn can’t quite evoke the richness that a more varied palette can bring. Then, there’s the nature of the songs themselves. They teem with vivid expressiveness and character. Like the songs of Hugo Wolf, the situations they depict burst with life like minute operas. Should a chamber version really be more than “more than” the piano songs or “less than” the orchestrations? Even the Schoenberg Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen comes across as neither here nor there unless performed with unusual character. These performers did well, but little could shake the impression that this was neither Mahler nor Olsen. I think I would have enjoyed it more if Olsen had created something quite new and original, acknowledging it as a variation on a theme by Mahler. That’s why the Berio orchestrations are so involving, and even the Schoenberg-Riehn Das Lied von der Erde has its own character. But a transcription needs to have more to say to validate itself, than simply to exist.

 

 

 

Timothy Ball, Classicalsource.com

http://www.classicalsource.com/db_control/db_concert_review.php?id=2182

Wunderhorn Arranged
Saturday, October 30, 2004

The Belcea Quartet's performance of Mendelssohn's E minor string quartet – actually the first of his Opus 44 to be composed, though numbered second – grew in stature and strength, culminating in a powerful and defiant finale.

 

Initially, there was a sense of the 'precious' about the playing, with not enough of the tensile quality needed to prevent this music from meandering, but on the repeat of first movement's exposition, the material acquired its inherent purpose, and one could admire Mendelssohn's ingenuity in developing his thematic ideas. The Belcea's homogeneity of ensemble was wholly admirable, as was the players’ commendable sense of 'give and take'. The second movement – a fleet-footed scherzo – was dispatched energetically, only relaxing for the viola's melancholy and momentary interjections. I'd have preferred a more subdued accompaniment at the start of the Andante, which would have enabled Corina Belcea's first-violin lines to have soared more freely, and throughout this movement, there was a certain want of a rapt, intimate quality. At least there was no lingering and self-indulgence. The volatile finale had inexorable propulsion, and the work moved determinedly towards its stern conclusion.

 

Samuel Barber's setting of Matthew Arnold's “Dover Beach”, for the unusual combination of baritone solo accompanied by string quartet, was given a performance of considerable conviction, thanks in no small measure to the distinguished and distinctive singing of Simon Keenlyside. His firm, rounded tone was responsive to the varied moods and hues of Barber's music, including some hushed, expressive singing towards the end of the first stanza, and a more passionate outburst at the start of the last. If, on occasions, one ideally needed a more restrained string accompaniment, there was, nevertheless, evident rapport between singer and players, not least where individual instruments – notably the cello – ‘duet' with the voice.

 

This is the third concert I have attended since the Wigmore Hall's re-opening, and on each occasion, transcriptions or arrangements have been included. At the opening concert, Paul Kildea conducted the Nash Ensemble in the Schoenberg/Riehn arrangement of Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde. James Olsen's transcriptions of songs from “Des Knaben Wunderhorn” similarly reduce the instrumental forces specified by the composer. In this instance, Mahler's generally substantial orchestrations are rendered by quintets of wind and strings plus harmonium and percussion – similar indeed to the Schoenberg/Riehn arrangement minus the piano.

 

Again, the question which hangs in the air is: "why?". Granted that performances of the original are not particularly frequent, but recordings of Mahler's conception are readily available – some of which are extremely good. There is no question that James Olsen's scoring is skilfully and expertly done, but the impact of the composer's own soundworld is, necessarily, reduced, and one couldn't help wondering throughout the performance how much more one would have preferred to have been listening to what Mahler actually intended.

 

The absence of heavy brass and certain percussion was distinctly noticeable, and single strings cannot, of course, convey the weight and colour of an orchestral string section. But the Belcea Quartet & Friends played extremely well, with some wind-playing which was alternately pointed and expressive, but I certainly did not care for a wheezy harmonium, which was particularly inappropriate in “Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen.”

 

It probably goes without saying that the singing was on a very high level indeed, with Simon Keenlyside relishing the biting irony and swagger of songs such as “Revelge”, and Ann Murray providing colour and character, whether flirty in “Verlor'ne Müh” or despairing in “Das irdische Leben”. However, both singers seemed to want the tempos to move on in places. They were indeed on the slow side occasionally, and one empathised with the singers' desire for more momentum.

 

There was no information provided as to the reasoning behind Olsen's commission. These arrangements may fill a niche and, possibly, provide suitable companions for the Schoenberg/Riehn Das Lied arrangement.