Dmitry Sitkovetsky (courtesy Jerusalem International Chamber Music Festival) |
Once again, the Jerusalem International
Chamber Music Festival was here to provide music-lovers with late-summer
enjoyment, its excitement and energy drawing large crowds and filling the
auditorium of the Jerusalem International YMCA to capacity. The 25th Jerusalem
International Chamber Music Festival (artistic director: Elena Bashkirova) took place September 5th-10th, 2022.
Arriving at the venue, one was greeted by Jerusalem's balmy evening breezes and the
magical carillon sounds emanating from the YMCA bell tower, as Gaby Shefler
entertained festival-goers with a selection of familiar melodies.
The Jerusalem International Chamber
Music Festival boasts its very own distinctive features. One is that it brings
together musicians from all over the world - young artists performing on stage with more
veteran musicians. Another is its concert programming, with each concert
offering new- or seldom-performed works and, in some cases, offering a different slant
on familiar pieces, all these alongside the canon of chamber music repertoire.
Concert No.3 (September 7th) was no exception. It opened with six of J.S.Bach's
Three-Part Inventions, BWV 787-801, as set for violin, viola and 'cello by
Dmitry Sitkovetsky. Performing them were Sitkovetsky (violin), Hartmut Rohde
(viola) and Xenia Jankovic on 'cello. So many of us have studied these 3-part keyboard
Inventions (or Sinfonias) in our youth, then to revisit them later with a wider
perspective. For the minor-key inventions, Sitkovetsky chose slow tempi, tempi
that might not be effective on the harpsichord, but here, on strings, resulting in poetic,
lyrical playing that gave prominence to each and every motif. As to the
inventions in major keys, the trio members let down their hair to perform them
with contrapuntal pizzazz, inviting the listener to follow how Bach plays out the
subject matter in each. These perfectly-chiselled jewels, the very same notes
that Bach had penned, but seen through the prism of the string player, made for
a splendid opener to the concert.
Arnold Schoenberg's Ode to Napoleon
Op.41 for narrator, string quartet and piano would not be a work often performed on these
shores, if at all. Composed during World War II as a protest against
tyranny, Lord Byron's poem castigating Napoleon served the composer in
expressing his own feelings. An impelling and turbulent piece, rich in motifs
and written in the manner of inflected speech (resembling Sprechstimme)
Schoenberg makes several references to
Beethoven. Conducted by Sitkovetsky, the artists displayed fine-tuned teamwork.
Presenting the 12-tone score with feisty precision, the instrumentalists
(Nathalia Milstein-piano, violinists Yamen Saadi and Mohamed Hiber, Hartmut
Rohde-viola, Astrig Siranossian-'cello), together with narrator (baritone)
Dietrich Henschel, brought out the work's
compelling message, its sarcasm and scorn. Schoenberg had insisted that the narrator must have "the number
of shades, essential to express one hundred and seventy kinds of derision,
sarcasm, hatred, ridicule, contempt, condemnation, etc., which I have tried to
portray in my music." Henschel did not disappoint, presenting the
work's compelling message in a performance that was indeed gripping,
resonant and genuinely theatrical.
These items were followed by three
works of Johannes Brahms. "Zwei Gesänge" Op.91, published 1884, had a strange genesis - to mend the marriage of violinist Joseph Joachim and
wife mezzo-soprano Amalie Weiss (both musical partners of Brahms and personal
friends), due to Joachim’s paranoid delusions about an affair he imagined
Amalie was having with Fritz August Simrock, Brahms’ publisher. Performing the
two songs at the Jerusalem concert were soprano Dorothea
Röschmann, Razvan Popovici-viola and Sunwook Kim (piano), their beautifully
balanced reading of “Gestillte Sehnsucht” (Longing at Rest, Rückert) and
“Geistliches Wiegenlied” (Sacred Lullaby, Geibel) - both songs sharing the image
of wind in trees, calming in the first and alarming in the second - sensitive,
dynamic and evocative. With fine-sculpted musical gestures, Popovici constantly
reached out to interact with Röschmann's
poignant singing and beauty of timbre.
In the late summer months of 1865,
having left Vienna for a working vacation in Baden, near the Black Forest,
Brahms rented an apartment with mountain views and began to imagine the Horn
Trio while walking in the woods. His mother, Christiane, had died the previous
February in Hamburg. The Trio in E-flat major for horn, violin and piano Op.40
brings together three instruments the composer
had played as a young man. (Despite his great love for the instrument, Brahms only
engaged the horn in one chamber music work.) What quickly became clear at
the Jerusalem concert was how wholly and naturally the three young outstanding artists - Ben
Goldscheider-horn, Clara Jumi-Kang-violin and Nathalia Milstein - had delved into the musical
and emotional meaning of this nostalgic and strangely modern piece, identifying
with its controlled sentimentality, its agitated and impetuous moments, its
urgent gestures, elegiac expressiveness and Romantic warmth. Ben Goldscheider
wields the unforgiving horn with easeful mastery and richness of timbre.
The event signed out with Brahms' Piano Quintet in F-minor Op.34, a dark, mighty work of huge scope, often considered to be Brahms' great chamber music epic, though completed when he was only thirty-one. Performing it here were violinists Dmitry Sitkovetsky and Mohamad Hiber, Gérard Caussé-viola, Tim Park-'cello and Sunwook Kim-piano. With both piano and strings playing an equally important role throughout this work, the artists created the whole-of-Brahms emotional journey in playing that was personal, lyrical, mysterious, fresh and with some subtly-flexed touches.
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