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A Concert Review
By Julie Stern
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THE NEWTOWN BEE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2006
Parker String Quartet Performance
Confirmed Extraordinary Reputation
They came from California (violinist Daniel Chong), Minnesota (violinist
Karen Kim), Texas (violist Jessica Bodner) and Seoul, South Korea (cellist
Kee-Hyun Kim).
Since coming together as the graduate quartet in residence at the New
England Conservatory, however, the members of the Parker String Quartet
have jelled into a harmonious unit whom The New York Times has called
"something extraordinary" and of whom The Washington Post declared
"they propel the music irresistibly but with extraordinary grace
and flexibility and, above all, they make sense of the music."
This was clearly evident at a concert performed at Edmond Town Hall last
Sunday afternoon, when they performed Mozart's Quartet in G Major, K387,
Schumann's Quartet in A minor, Opus 41, No.1, and, perhaps in a nod to
the Halloween season, Gyorgy Ligeti's Metamorphosis Nocturnes.
The choice of pieces was interesting in that Mozart wrote K.387 in a
tribute to Haydn, because he was inspired by studying several of Haydn's
quartets, and then, sixty years later, Schumann wrote Opus 41 to demonstrate
what he had learned from studying Haydn and Mozart.
Ligeti, a modern Hungarian composer, who fled his country during the
1956 revolution and became a naturalized Austrian citizen, and who died
in June of this year, wrote many kinds of music from choral and operatic
works to absurdist experimental pieces. In addition, his music was used
by Stanley Kubrick in movies including 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Shining
and Eyes Wide Shut.
This cinematic quality hovered at the edges of the Nocturnes, so that
one could almost imagine shadows of goblins flying behind the white backdrop.
In all cases the group played with remarkable definition and synchronicity,
so that every note was easy to hear, every passage easy to follow. The
performers were filled with electric energy and joy that spilled over
into the audience.
The auditorium was solidly packed, and included many young people, some
of whom were going to be working with the members of the quartet the next
day as part of an outreach program for the eighth grade music classes
at Newtown's middle school.
Perhaps because some people were attending their first chamber music
concert, they didn't realize that one does not clap at the intervals between
movements. The musicians handled this with the same grace and good humor
that permeated their entire performance.
It is hard to imagine a better group with which to ignite a love of classical
music in kids.
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