concert review: Daedalus Quartet
Apr. 20th, 2009 05:05 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's been summer weather, stifling and airless in the acoustically well-equipped le petit Trianon. The building doors were left open in fruitless mitigation.
Inside, the Daedalus Quartet gave a smooth and matter-of-fact performance, pleasant enough, but de-emphasizing the quirkiness of Haydn's Op. 20, No. 6; then, joined by clarinetist Alexander Fiterstein, gave supremely blended sound to the Brahms Clarinet Quintet. Properly stirred together, the clarinet and strings as a unit sound unlike either of them separately. Brahms wanted that combined sound, and here he got it; but the interpretation of the work was dull and sketchily shaped. What was missing was shown up by contrast with an encore of the slow movement from the Mozart quintet, which brilliantly caught the sheer beauty in Mozart's plainness.
Also on the program, Elliott Carter's String Quartet No. 5 (1995). I know it's Carter's centenary year, and he's long been feted as a genius, but look: I've been listening to abstract modern music for nearly forty years, and I love a lot of dark, unforgiving works. So if a piece does absolutely nothing for me, then I don't think the failure is entirely mine, no matter how eminent the composer, see?
In my latest published review, I'd written that John Adams's music is "made to be listened to," and is not "a dull intellectual exercise for the benefit of the performers." This is the type of work I meant to contrast Adams to. Carter was inspired to write this work by watching chamber groups rehearse, trying ideas out on each other, wordlessly shifting to accommodate the ensemble. And from what I could tell, the intricate exchanges and handovers and rhythmic overlays must make this a fascinatingly challenging work to play. But that's not a substitute for communicating ideas or emotions to the listener. The only point of interest in this work was the shifting sonorities - as I noted, the Daedalus Quartet are excellent in displaying sound quality - but in the absence of anything to connect it to, it was like half an hour of watching musical wallpaper dry.
Inside, the Daedalus Quartet gave a smooth and matter-of-fact performance, pleasant enough, but de-emphasizing the quirkiness of Haydn's Op. 20, No. 6; then, joined by clarinetist Alexander Fiterstein, gave supremely blended sound to the Brahms Clarinet Quintet. Properly stirred together, the clarinet and strings as a unit sound unlike either of them separately. Brahms wanted that combined sound, and here he got it; but the interpretation of the work was dull and sketchily shaped. What was missing was shown up by contrast with an encore of the slow movement from the Mozart quintet, which brilliantly caught the sheer beauty in Mozart's plainness.
Also on the program, Elliott Carter's String Quartet No. 5 (1995). I know it's Carter's centenary year, and he's long been feted as a genius, but look: I've been listening to abstract modern music for nearly forty years, and I love a lot of dark, unforgiving works. So if a piece does absolutely nothing for me, then I don't think the failure is entirely mine, no matter how eminent the composer, see?
In my latest published review, I'd written that John Adams's music is "made to be listened to," and is not "a dull intellectual exercise for the benefit of the performers." This is the type of work I meant to contrast Adams to. Carter was inspired to write this work by watching chamber groups rehearse, trying ideas out on each other, wordlessly shifting to accommodate the ensemble. And from what I could tell, the intricate exchanges and handovers and rhythmic overlays must make this a fascinatingly challenging work to play. But that's not a substitute for communicating ideas or emotions to the listener. The only point of interest in this work was the shifting sonorities - as I noted, the Daedalus Quartet are excellent in displaying sound quality - but in the absence of anything to connect it to, it was like half an hour of watching musical wallpaper dry.
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Date: 2009-04-22 02:52 am (UTC)Make the art emotionally appealing , a joy to listen to, first. Then it will be both worthwhile, and a pleasure, to study it intellectually as well. The best art measures high on both scales.