2005 Festival
11th - 13th February 2005
The
Nash Ensemble
Friday 11th February, 8.00pm, Harty Room, QUB
Mozart Horn Quintet in E flat,
K 407
R Strauss Till Eulenspiegel
Schubert Octet in F, Op 166
Review in Newsletter by
Andrea Rea
Heart and soul makes it all Nash and easy on
the ear
The world-renowned Nash
Ensemble performed in the Harty Room at Queen’s on Friday
night to a very appreciative capacity crowd.
This was the opening concert
of the Belfast Music Society’s International Festival of
Chamber Music, which took place over the weekend.
Friday’s concert
began with a quintet by Mozart scored for horn, violin, two violas
and cello.
The presence of a pair
of violas in a quintet is quite unusual and gave a mellow centre
to the sound.
It provided a good foundation
for what has been called a chamber concerto for horn.
There was a terrific level
of communication between the players – lots of eye contact
and body language which made for near-perfect ensemble. They played
with spirit and most engagingly, heart.
The piece that followed,
Strauss’ Till Eulenspiegel describes the adventures of the
eponymous medieval hero and does this with considerable wit.
This is a demanding, virtuoso
work that condenses the more familiar full orchestra version into
a chamber piece.
The last work of the evening
was Schubert’s Octet in F, scored for a full quartet of strings
plus double bass, horn, bassoon and clarinet.
Although symphonic in
scale, the Nashes were able to emphasise the chamber quality of
the piece with skilful dynamic shading. Each musician is a soloist
at various points in this work and each equally knew when to pull
back into the instrumental texture.
There were fewer smiles
passing between the performers and perhaps less heart in the interpretation,
but it was stunningly executed and musically well-judged.
It was great to hear such
an accomplished and starry group, and their performance set a wonderfully
high standard for the rest of the BMS Chamber Music Festival.
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Xue
Fei Yang
Saturday 12th February, 1.00pm, Harty Room,
QUB
Included music by:
Sor, Tarrega, Scarlatti, Albeniz |
The
Lindsays - A Masterclass
Saturday 12th February, 2.30pm,
Harty Room, QUB
Some of Northern Ireland’s
up and coming string players were put through their paces by some of
the finest string players in the world.
The following musicians
Belfast High School Quartet (leader
Vicky Schmidt)
St Malachi's String Quartet
CBSM Heagney Quartet
QUB Piano Trio
Violin Lisa Perry (QUB)
Violin Michael Trainor
Violin Ronan McManus (St Malachy's College)
Violin Rebecca Kelly
Viola Barbara Untiedt (MCB) |
Viola Richard Gibson (Grosvenor
Grammar School)
Viola Marion McCrickard
Cello David Sloan (CBSM)
Cello David McCann (Rathmore G.S.) |
accepted our invitations to participate |
Matthias
Goerne with Alexander Schmalcz
Saturday 12th February,
8.00pm, Great Hall, QUB
Beethoven An die ferne Geliebte, Op 98 (To the distant beloved)
Schubert Schwanengesang, D 957
(Final songs: serenades and songs of love and loss)
Review in Belfast Telegraph by Rathcol
Lieder at its best
Matthias Goerne and the members of the Belfast Music Society will
not forget each other for some time to come. The great baritone's
recital on Saturday night stuttered into motion beset with gremlins;
a problem with the tuning of the piano caused a considerable delay
at the outset and Goerne, mean and menacing, interrupted the first
song of Beethoven's Op.98 to demand the complete attention of the
door staff.
But after the first tense half-hour a somewhat shell-shocked audience
was treated to an all-powerful display of lieder at its animated
and involving best. Goerne's presence is immediate and gripping.
He has the expressive range, in stance, manner and delivery, of a
Shakespearean actor and the musical ability of a true master.
The voice is beautiful, but not superficially so; the clear-toned
clarity and depth serves the delivery of poetry and is a powerful
tool in Goerne's search for the perfect union of drama, music and
text. The two parts of the recital, Beethoven's An die ferne Geliebte and
Schubert's Schwanengesang, were each delivered in vibrant
colour and stunning detail, the emotional backdrops intense and demanding.
The second half of the programme - comprising the six overwhelming,
desolate Heine settings - had its own external adversary. But even
the harsh Belfast wind that rattled the windows of the Great Hall
was tamed by Goerne and Schubert as they brought the audience to
a sudden, soul-searching stop
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The Lindsays
Sunday 13th
February, 3.00pm, Great Hall, QUB
Haydn String Quartet, Op 76,
No 5
Janacek String Quartet, No 1
Beethoven String
Quartets Op 130 & Op
133
Review in Belfast Telegraph by Rathcol
Like today’s quality
newspapers the Belfast Music Society’s annual programme has
become compact.
Packaged as An International
Festival of Chamber Music, this three day event included four outstanding
recitals and a master class in QUB’s Harty Room and Great
Hall.
The response has been
positive: ticket sales have been healthy (although it is a shame
that Belfast can’t provide a sell-out in even these small
venues for artists of this quality) and the audience also seems
to have a more youthful countenance.
The music-making over
the weekend has been exceptional, and to complete the festival
the Lindsay Quartet delivered a programme of old favourites Beethoven,
Haydn and Janacek – played with a commitment and a polished
turn of phrase which has won these players such a dedicated following
over the years. Strangely, it was Janacek’s Quartet No. 1
(The Kreutzer Sonata) that seems to have aged badly, its dramatic
leit motifs and gestures appearing obvious and dated. Not so the
two German masters. Haydn’s Quartet Op 76 No. 5 bristled
with beautiful detail and textural depth and the recital really
took flight as the group moved on to late Beethoven and the Quartet
Op 130 which was reacquainted with its original finale the Grosse
Fugue (published as op 133).
This amazing, challenging
movement has to be seen in concert to be believed, the physical
demand on the players is considerable, and the Lindsays were equal
to the challenge, taking the audience on a journey through music
still has the power to shock.
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Review of 2005 Festival in The
Irish Times by Dermot Gault
Instead of spreading a programme of concerts throughout
the year, the Belfast Music Society has concentrated its activities for this
season in a weekend International Festival of Chamber Music. Now in its 40th
year, the Nash Ensemble has performed the Schubert Octet often enough, but
one hasn’t always heard its players enjoying the bucolic rhythms of
the scherzo to this extent, or relishing the work’s full sonorities
with such obvious pleasure. The friendly acoustics of the Harty Room at Queen’s
University helped.
The Nash Ensemble sometimes plays arrangements of orchestral
works, and while, for example, the arrangements made by Schönberg and
his pupils for his private performing society have a documentary interest,
one usually comes away feeling that the composer knew best when he scored
the original for full orchestra. The version of Till Eulenspiegel for
violin, double bass, flute, clarinet and horn worked, however, because the
very idea has a certain Eulenspiegel-like effrontery, and various small recompositions
encourage the belief that the otherwise unknown arranger, one “Hasselohrl”,
is a pseudonym for Strauss himself.
On the following evening the start of Matthias Goerne’s
recital was delayed, and then Beethoven’s An die ferne Geliebte was
interrupted when the singer objected because a door at the back of the hall
had been left open. Quite right, too. Goerne’s involvement in the music
he sings is total, and there can be no breach in the charmed circle into
which he draws his listeners.
His exceptionally beautiful baritone commands a wide compass
and an astonishing range of tone and expression, which brought insights into
every song in Schubert’s Schwanengesang. Goerne’s ordering
of this posthumous collection added the beautiful Herbst, discovered later,
and omitted Die Taubenpost – which, however, made an apposite encore.
Alexander Schmalcz was an ideal partner and the University’s
Great Hall a suitable intimate and resonant venue.
It’s an equally friendly venue for strings, as was
shown in the concert by The Lindsays which ended the festival. This group
is not shy of emotional commitment either, although in grappling with the
music’s essence, the niceties of tone production can be sacrificed
perhaps too readily, as in the lst movement of Janácek’s Kreutzer
Sonata quartet or the Grosse Fuge finale of Beethoven’s Op 130. But
the gypsy finale of Haydn’s Op 76 No 5 Quartet had plenty of spirit
and there was depth of expression, and beauty of tone, in the slow movement
of the Haydn and the Cavatina of the Beethoven. Sadly, this was probably
our last chance to hear this veteran ensemble which is retiring, as a quartet,
in July this year.
Review of 2005 Festival in Newsletter
by Andrea Rea
Festival shines through miserable winter
The Belfast Music Society International Festival of Chamber
Music gave music lovers a day to remember on Saturday, presenting two contrasting
recitalists in very different settings.
In the afternoon, Xuefei Yang took to the stage of the
Harty Room and played a long and demanding programme of works for solo
guitar. She had a memory slip during the second of two Scarlatti sonatas
which began the programme, but from the second piece on, Yang was more
assured and we began to get a truer sense of her artistry. She spoke quietly
to the audience about the music and charmed everyone with her modest manner.
Saturday’s recital in the Great Hall at Queen’s
was an altogether different concert which got off to a tense start, delayed
to allow last minute re-tuning of the piano. Eventually baritone Matthias
Goerner did appear and begin, only to stop early on and demand that a door
at the back of the hall be closed. Certainly, he was right to ask this,
but his annoyance was slow to dissipate and it made for an uneasy first
half. He sang Beethoven’s An die ferne Geliebte and then Schubert’s
Schwannengesang, which was divided between the two halves of the convert.
Goerne is a compelling physical presence on stage, moving and looking around
a lot and often singing towards the pianist Alexander Schmalcz, whose playing
was responsive and secure. Goerne’s voice is, as they say, to die
for. His vocal quality is liquid and even, with a tone that has rightly
been compared to velvet. He has tendency to sing sharp occasionally at
moments of high emotion in the music and his German is less clearly articulated
than one might expect. However, given his sublime voice, just about everything
can be forgiven. His approach to lieder is certainly memorable and the
voice is clearly destined for great things.
Bravo to the BMS for bringing us all of the concerts in
this Festival and brightening the wet and windy last days of winter
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