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SEEN AND HEARD
INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Haydn, Yoffe, Mansurian: "From the Book of Quartets I", Rosamunde String Quartet, Historic Auditorium of the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich 23.1.2009 (JFL)
Yoffe:
2 x 9
Poems from the Book of Quartets (2005-2009, World Premieres)
Haydn:
String Quartets op.17/5 in G and 77/2 in F
Mansurian:
String
Quartet No.1 (1984), A Yerevan Courtyard with Mulberry Tree (2008, World
Premiere), Testament (2004)
The Rosamunde Quartet has embarked on a new chamber music series, and on January
23rd it opened in style at the Munich Music Academy to a rather
glamorous crowd that included ex-ministers, chamber music luminaries, and the
composers Tigran Mansurian (b.1939) and Boris Yoffe (b.1968). The series’ name,
“From the Book of Quartets”, is taken from a collection of works by Yoffe who,
like other people might write journal entries or daily poems, writes one page of
music for string quartet every day. Two batches of nine such “poems”, written
between 2005 and 2009, were given their world premiere. Obviously very short
pieces, each has just one idea which is developed with Webern-esque conciseness.
Some were shy, hesitant things, others confident with short, lyrical strokes,
others yet agitated and put together from phrases as if built from little toy
blocks.
Eighteen of those were quite enough to set the stage for Haydn’s op.17/5 to
impress. The driven performance of the quartet was entertaining in that it
brought musical diversion, but hardly the last word in Haydn-playing. It was for
Mansurian’s First String Quartet from 1984 to provide a highlight: somber notes
— like much of Mansurian —searching and meandering with much dialog just between
the violins. Passages with notable glissandos sounded like Gloria Coates had
stopped by and the work was best when agitated, jolting the music out of its
subdued mood… only to fall back into melancholy.
When classical and modern works alternate, sometimes one of the two suffers.
This is particularly true when the modern works on the program have taken up all
the practicing time and Haydn—in this case—is expected to be just dashed off
prima vista. Haydn’s op.77/2 was no improvement over op.17, which is to say
that it was unworthy of the quartet’s reputation. And on top of careless
phrasing and shoddy ensemble playing, first violinist Andreas Reiner either has
a bad instrument or — apart from more than his share of wrong notes —manages for
a surprisingly unsatisfying tone. The instrument is the King Max Joseph
Stradivari, which makes assigning the blame easier.
Maybe there was too much music on the program: a movement, each, of Haydn
between Yoffe and Mansurian would have been enough, might have assured more
concentrated performances of the former, and allowed even more focus on the
latter. The world premiere of Tigran Mansurian’s “A Yerevan Courtyard With
Mulberry Tree”, for example. It’s a beautiful work, very Pärt-like in its
atmosphere of chilling tension. Mansurian’s final work of the night, “Testament”
(dedicated to the head of the ECM label, Manfred Eicher) showed Schubertian airs
in a gorgeous lamento which, too, works with that modern simplicity of
Pärt’s barren landscapes. It’s like a string trio which sings above the second
violin; immediately fetching, moving, and an ‘easy’ audience success. Best of
all, this — and the Yoffe encore — was very well played, nearly redeeming what
had been done unto Haydn. At the end, the audience enthusiastically applauded
its own sophistication. A great evening.
“From the Book of Quartets” will include three more concerts, several film
screenings, and open rehearsals. The second concert will feature Haydn’s “Seven
Last Words” alternating with readings from Samuel Becket’s “Stirring Still”.
Part three will have Luigi Nono and readings from Hölderlin, Part four more
Yoffe, Bach, Haydn, and Pärt.
Jens F. Laurson
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