October 9th 2021 was a day of brilliant
Autumn sunshine, bringing crowds of people to the verdant and buzzing village
of Ein Kerem (Jerusalem). The hall of the Eden-Tamir Music Center was packed to
capacity for the weekly Saturday morning concert, this event featuring the Tel
Aviv Wind Quintet - Roy Amotz-flute, Dmitry Malkin-guest oboist, Danny
Erdman-clarinet, Itamar Leshem-horn and Nadav Cohen-bassoon - with guest
pianist Aviram Reichert. Welcoming the audience was Dr. Dror Semmel, the
center's director.
If the object of the divertimento was
to entertain, the Tlvwq's playing of Harold Perry's wind quintet arrangement of
Joseph Haydn's (1782) Divertimento in B flat
Major Hob II:46 absolutely fit the bill. The performance abounded in energy,
dynamic variety and touches of Haydnesque humour, its sense of well-being
gift-wrapped in the ensemble's signature richness of timbre. Their playing of
the "Chorale St. Antoni"
(2nd movement) possibly
written by Haydn's pupil Ignaz Pleyel (19th century publishers were known for attributing
works to famous composers in order to increase sales) emerged noble and stately.
Aviram Reichert joined
Malkin, Erdman, Leshem and Cohen to perform L.v.Beethoven's Quintet for
piano and winds in E flat major Op.16, a work composed by the composer in his 20s
and clearly modelled
after a quintet in the same key and scoring as that of Mozart (K. 452). From the extended slow Grave
leading into the opening movement, one that happens to be as long as the two
following movements combined, there was a solid sense of teamwork throughout -
playing that was both effervescent and offering lyrical, appealing wind solos
in the Andante (second) movement, (no Minuet and Trio) and culminating in the
rondo of the Allegro movement. The latter's "hunting" theme, lively
pace and cheerful,
sunny disposition were punctuated by occasional reflective moments, but
also filled with rollicking good humour. Sounding the most like an actual piano
concerto, the Allegro ma non troppo movement makes for a sparkling and witty conclusion. The wind players'
detail and large palette of textures and timbres made for interesting
listening. Reichert's performance met the challenges of the quintet's
marvellous piano role with involvement, expressiveness, buoyant- and exciting
playing.
Israeli bassoonist
Mordechai Rechtman (B.1926, Germany) is well known for his more-than
200 transcriptions and arrangements for wind quintet, wind instruments and
large wind ensembles, several of them performed around the world under
his own direction. The Tlvwq played his arrangement of the Allegro from Giuseppe
Verdi's String Quartet in E minor (1873), the first movement of Verdi's only
surviving chamber work and one that might not have been written at all were it
not for the fact that the Naples production of "Aida" in early March
of 1873 had to be delayed due to the sudden illness of the leading soprano. The
Tlvwq players give expression and colour to Verdi's wonderful melodic ideas
(occasional hints as to one or another of his operas), juxtaposing virtuosic
sections with light textures and cantabile playing. Rechtman's setting gets
pleasing results in the hands of first-rate players. The program also included
three of J.S.Bach's Chorale Preludes as arranged by Dr. Uri Rom (Buchmann-Mehta
School of Music, Tel Aviv). Introducing the arrangements, two of which were
premieres, Rom informed the audience that he has added counterpoint to them (as
did Bach in his own new settings of works), with the wind quintet contexture offering
more possibilities of interpolating counterpoint than the pipe organ. In
"Jesu Leiden, Pein und Tod", the sections of chorale melody were
allotted to the flute (Amotz), reflecting Bach's chorale variation style. Listening to Rom's
arrangement of "Wachet auf", the subject this time introduced by the
horn (Leshem), I found myself wondering how propitious such copious
counterpoint and ornamentation was to this much-loved work.
The concert concluded
with Austrian clarinettist/composer/arranger Reinhard Gutschy's arrangement for
piano and winds of George Gershwin's 1924 "Rhapsody in Blue", the
work bringing Gershwin fame as “the man who had brought jazz into the concert
hall". This was an exciting work to end the Ein Kerem concert, indeed
experiential for both the players and audience, as it opened with the clarinet
(Erdman) in the ever-thrilling upward-sweeping ribbon of uninterrupted pitches (the
glissando that became an iconic sound of American music), unleashing a
floodgate of vivid ideas blending seamlessly into one another. The pulsing
syncopated rhythms and showy music give way to a warm, expansive melody, the lush Andantino
moderato section, with Gershwin at his most lyrical and catchy. Currently Associate
Professor of Piano at Seoul National University, College of Music, this was
Aviram Reichert's second rendition of the piece with the Tel Aviv Wind Quintet. Engaging his
brilliant technique, sense of colour, rhythmic flexibility and feel for sweet
sentimentality to the cause, his playing created the impression of spontaneous
improvisation the composer had intended. (Actually, much of the solo part
at the premiere was improvised by Gershwin, one page of the score simply
directing bandleader Paul Whiteman to wait for a nod to continue.) The Tlvwq players gave expression to the work's full-on energy, its whimsy, its jazzy slick and
charm.
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