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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Whangarei Music Society, in
association with Chamber Music NZ: Tawahi
Trio - Donald O’Neil (viola), Jean-Michel
Bertelli (clarinet), Richard Beauchamp (piano)
Capitaine Bougainville Theatre, Whangarei, New
Zealand, 7.8.2008 (PSe)
Alfred Uhl
– Kleines Konzert
Schumann –
Märchenerzählungen
(Fairy Tales) op. 132
Rebecca Clarke – Prelude, Allegro and Pastorale
Mozart – Trio in E flat, K498 “Kegelstatt”
Where would we be without those happy little
accidents and coincidences that help to brighten
things up? One occurred in 2006, whilst the Lyon
Opera Company was at the Edinburgh Festival. Donald
O’Neil, one of the orchestra’s viola players, just
happened to bump into an old pal, pianist Richard
Beauchamp. In itself, that’s hardly what you’d
call Earth-shattering but this chance reunion of two
expatriate Kiwis ignited an idea – why not form a
compact chamber group specifically for touring New
Zealand? Taking “busmen’s holidays” would, to say the
least, save a packet on trips home! So, opting for a
trio, they roped in the clarinettist Jean-Michel
Bertelli, a colleague and occasional chamber music
partner of O'Neil's. Their choice of name was really
neat – “Tawahi” means “the other side”, in the sense
of “across the ocean”.
I sometimes feel so sorry for the viola, and not
because of all the jokes. It has such a cuddly,
lovable, “acorn-coloured” sound, intimate and is so
very quietly-spoken. Unfortunately, this last quality
makes it difficult to accommodate as a solo
instrument. To make its matk, the viola must rely on
considerationboth from composers, who generally avoid
it, and from playing partners who, let’s face it,
cannot entirely subordinate their own interests. The
articulate and vociferous clarinet, if anything,
suffers from the opposite problem.
I’d hazard that for these reasons, most composers
conclude that they clarinet and and viola make
uncomfortably strange bedfellows. The four featured
in this recital, at least, thought otherwise, as of
course must the Tawahi Trio. Truth to tell, the works
presented revealed that in spite of their apparent
incompatibility, the viola and clarinet actually go
together like peaches and cream – provided, that is,
that the performers play ball.
And “ball” was what the Tawahi Trio definitely
played. Both Bertelli, whose body-language would have
won Harry Partch’s approval, and the more
businesslike Beauchamp epitomised good manners. The
former evidently reined in his clarinet’s power, with
a presumed proportionate gain in tonal purity. The
latter’s fingers truly “tickled the ivories”
almost treating the piano as a spinet. In a very real
sense, both players were implicitly obeying the
admonishment generally inscribed on that singularly
fragile instrument: fait plus douceur que violence.
Did it do the trick? Well, not quite – the louder or
more agitated the music, the less the viola came
through. To be fair though, the lady sitting next to
me thought it sounded fine, which I guess
makes me a bit too picky. Nevertheless, as the viola
is such a crucial component of both the Tawahi Trio
and their programme, it wouldn’t hurt for them to
make double-sure that they nail this.
Overall, the Tawahi Trio’s playing strikes me as
refined – possibly due to a certain Gallic influence?
– and expressive but without affectation. The
Schumann movements were well characterised, whilst
Mozart – who was no slouch at promoting both the
clarinet and the viola – benefited from the lack of
affectation; although refinement did rather smooth
the “dance” out of the Minuet. Perhaps
surprisingly, given the exalted company, the
recital’s real highlights came courtesy of the two
“lesser” composers.
Perusing the programme I wondered at first, “Who the
hell is Alfred Uhl?” but soon found out. He is
someone who, when it comes to marrying his peaches to
his cream, really knows his onions! Enjoyable as were
the concerto-esque pyrotechnics, it was when Uhl
caused Bertelli and O’Neil to converge onto
curvaceous melodic lines that my jaw dropped. I’d
never heard anything quite like it; the
extraordinary, luminous beauty of their blended sound
left my metaphor looking decidedly dog-eared.
Rebecca Clarke’s description of her work as
“unpretentious” refers to its modesty of means and
style. Equally modest herself, she made no claims for
any emotional depth. Calling the Pastorale
“rather melancholy and nostalgic” in no way prepares
its audience for what happens: an initially innocent
idyll becomes blighted by almost imperceptibly
creeping corruption. Suddenly, a bell rang in
my head, and I asked myself, “When was this
written?” Not I, but the programme note replied,
“1941” – amid the Second World War’s darkest days.
Here’s another of those accidents and coincidences,
because the entire process and intention is the same
as the (equally misleadingly titled!) Romanza
of Vaughan Williams’s contemporaneous Fifth Symphony.
Other than a great, big “thank you”, further comment
on the skill of the Tawahi Trio is, I suspect,
superfluous.
Paul Serotsky
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