Oil Sets New Record Ahead Of Fed Meeting
Oil futures rose as high as $80.50 and other energy futures rose today on expectations the Fed will cut the benchmark federal funds rate....
Read Full Article
Punk Chick Pioneers
Rock has overlooked the Slits, writes Anthony Carew....
Read Full Article
Kodak Offers Improved Camera Chip
Eastman Kodak says it has developed an image sensor that greatly improves the quality of pictures and video captured by camera phones....
Read Full Article
Music Review: Taking Life Philosophically, One Heartache At A Time
Sandy Stewart and Bill Charlap turned the Oak Room of the Algonquin Hotel into a meditation room on Tuesday evening....
Read Full Article
William D. Modell, Seller Of Sporting Goods, Is Dead At 86
Mr. Modell joined Modell’s Sporting Goods, a 118-year-old family-owned business, at the end of World War II and became chairman in 1985....
Read Full Article

Music Review | Yefim Bronfman And Friends: Championing Luminaries Of Chamber Music’s Past, And Visionaries Of Its Future


For the finale of his Perspectives series at Carnegie Hall on Sunday, the pianist Yefim Bronfman assembled a group of his colleagues — the violinist Gil Shaham, the cellist Lynn Harrell and the Emerson String Quartet — for an afternoon of unusually vigorous and engaging chamber playing. The program’s comfortably familiar pillars were the Shostakovich Piano Quintet (Op. 57) and the Tchaikovsky Trio (Op. 50). But Mr. Bronfman also devoted a significant part of the program to premieres by Marc-André Dalbavie and Jörg Widmann.

Mr. Dalbavie’s Trio No. 1 (2008) begins with the piano playing a slowly morphing chord that starts as a series of strident blasts and gradually loses its sharp edges. Woven between these chords are fragments of a lyrical theme, in tandem violin and cello lines. As the theme coalesces, and the piano chords melt, Mr. Dalbavie builds a rich, harmonically freewheeling texture that invites the kind of intensity in which Mr. Bronfman, Mr. Shaham and Mr. Harrell thrive.

Yet within this often dense harmonic cloud, Mr. Dalbavie placed a recurring theme based on a straightforward descending scale that made its way from piano to strings and back, as if it were the grandest of musical ideas. Toward the end, a rising scale briefly took its place. It seemed an odd gesture, but perhaps it was Mr. Dalbavie’s way of showing how complexity and startling simplicity can play off each other. In the end the score was hard to resist, and it could hardly have had more eloquent champions.

In Mr. Widmann’s “XI Humoresken” (2007), Mr. Bronfman had the stage to himself. This set of short piano works takes its cue from Schumann in the pieces’ flightiness, variety and virtuosic demands. And like the Dalbavie, this work moves easily between lyricism and jaggedness, innocence and self-conscious sophistication. The most striking piece, “Zerrinnendes Bild” (“Streaming Image”), was a study in tightly compressed virtuosity.

Mr. Bronfman and the Emerson Quartet joined forces for a precise, searing account of the Shostakovich, in which the composer’s icy clarity and fermented rage came through vividly. It was the kind of performance you think would be hard to top for sheer passion, but Mr. Bronfman, Mr. Shaham and Mr. Harrell surpassed it in a thundering no-holds-barred performance of the Tchaikovsky.

Tag Cloud

External Information

Additional Information

Orchestra’s Daring Mix: Bit of Bach and a Jolt of Jazz...
Music Review | ’Radiohead’: Thom Yorke and Company, Kicking Off a Tour With a Lu...
Music Review | Grace Potter and the Nocturnals: The Sound of the ?70s From a Sin...
Music Review | Emerson String Quartet: In Different Minor Keys, Three Formidable...

Where Am I?

News Main Page - Business - Music Review | Yefim Bronfman And Friends: Championing Luminaries Of Chamber Music’s Past, And Visionaries Of Its Future


 
i8news.com