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A Concert Review
By June S. April
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THE NEWTOWN BEE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2004
Quartet And Guest Offered
An Exciting Auditory Challenge
Though they are relatively new on the musical scene, Enso String Quartet
is clearly one of the up-and-coming bright, talented musical groups that
can excite an audience with its technical virtuosity and range of repertoire.
Since its inception at Yale's Graduate School, violinists Maureen Nelson
and Tereza Stanislav, violist Robert Brophy and cellist Richard Belcher
have won awards at the Concert Artists Guild International Competition
(first place) and at Chamber Music in Yellow Springs.
The quartet performed the latest concert in Newtown Friends of Music's
2004-2005 season of sponsored events, on November 14 at Edmond Town Hall.
Sunday's program opened with a balanced interpretation of Haydn's String
Quartet No 27 in D Major, Op 20, No 4. The final selection for the afternoon
was a magnificently moving work by Johannes Brahms, the String Quartet
in c minor, Opus 51, No 1.
Sandwiched between those works, the quartet demonstrated that the richness
of their playing, and their understanding of the classics, belies the
five years they have been together. To meld into a musical unit often
takes many more years, but these gifted musicians have a particularly
strong connection between them.
Stimulating audience imagination is one of the exciting benefits of listening
to fine music. Contemporary music brings particular challenge by offering
the mind to emotionally respond to "newer" sounds and progressions.
If not a harmonious, melodic experience, it most certainly inspires the
senses to react to deeper gut feelings.
Commissioned in 1995 by Lincoln Center, John Paul Corigliano's String
Quartet begins extremely quietly, seemingly a triple pianissimo (barely
audible, soft/quiet). One wondered whether it would even be heard beyond
the first row.
Happily, the acoustics at Edmond Town Hall are very good and even those
in the balcony could hear the opening strings that conjured images of
far-away/fog-embraced eerie sounds. The five segments were each excitingly
provocative and replete with chordal contrasts and lyrical versus atonal
portions.
The musicians' energetic technical skills were tested and the Enso String
Quartet passed with great panache. Mr Corigliano's span of musical compositions
is impressive. His score for the 1999 movie The Red Violin won him an
Academy Award. He has written operas, orchestral music and concerti for
several of the wind instruments. In 2000, Corigliano won the Pulitzer
Prize for his Symphony No 2. Also that year he wrote Mr Tambourine Man:
Seven Poems of Bob Dylan. The resonance for the Enso Quartet to this exciting
composer's work is obvious and pleasurable to experience.
A further bonus of the afternoon concert was the inclusion of the gifted
baritone Thomas Meglioranza. The velvet richness of his voice as he sang
Samuel Barber's Dover Beach, Opus 3, was indeed most gratifying. There
is no doubt why he is in much demand, just the clarity of his diction
is a joy to hear. Then to relish the roundness of his tomes
Ah, this is a young man who can bring spectators to their feet to affirm
his talent with standing ovations.
Once again, Newtown Friends of Music has served its audiences with outstanding
musical adventures. It was heartening to see about four dozen young people
in attendance, and those this reviewer spoke to also enjoyed it. Credit
and recognition goes to the diligent efforts of Ellen Parrella, now beginning
her 18th year as president of Newtown Friends of Music, and to teachers
like Mr Hedin and Mr Lee at the Newtown schools, and Michelle Hiscavich,
the director of music and the orchestra. These educators regularly educate
their students about what Newtown Friends of Music programs are about.
They also play passages of the music that is to be performed in upcoming
concerts, stimulating an important give and take of ideas.
For those who are interested, Enso String Quartet will shortly have its
first compact disc on the market. On the Naxos Label, it will be a two-disc
set of quartets by Ignaz Playel, a highly respected and popular composer
(and publisher) of the 18th century.
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