Trio Klavis: Jenny Lippl, Sabina Hasanova, Miha Ferk (photo: Petra Klose) |
Welcoming the
audience gathered in the exquisite Pasha Room of the hotel, Mr. Arno Mitterdorfer, director of the Austrian Cultural
Forum in Tel Aviv, referred to the American Colony Hotel as a “gem” of a venue,
a place of co-existence and an oasis of culture bringing together people of all
walks of life. Mr. Mitterdorfer spoke of Trio Klavis as having already made a
great impact on the Austrian musical scene. The Austrian Cultural Forum
actively supports Austrian artists and their activities in Israel and the
Palestinian territories.
For the festive
event, the players chose works from four different countries and styles
spanning the 18th- to 20th centuries. Trio Klavis members offered a few words
on each item on the program. All the pieces had been adapted and arranged by
Miha Ferk. The program opened with W.A.Mozart’s Kegelstatt Trio KV 498 (1786),
originally scored for clarinet, viola and piano. It was first performed at the
Jacquin residence in Vienna, where family and friends met weekly to enjoy time
in discussion, games, and music-making. In the Kegelstatt Trio, originally performed there, Mozart
played the viola part. The rumour that the piece was composed during an
afternoon game of skittles - hence the nickname “Kegelstatt” (or playground for
skittles, an old European variety of bowling) - remains unproven. But, whatever
its origin, the work exudes a warm sense of contentment and delight. Despite
their disparate instrumental combination and the fact that the saxophone is
limited in how pianissimo it can play, the Klavis artists preserved the work’s
Classical style, its Mozartian delicacy and elegance, its lively dialogues
and its hearty sense of well-being. In the seven-part Rondo Allegretto, a reference to the concerto style, the virtuosic writing for all three
instruments, accompanied by attentive listening on the part of all players,
made for an exciting finale.
Then to the Aria of Heitor Villa-Lobos’ Bachianas
Brasileiras No.5, written in the 1940s when the composer was riding a wave of
international recognition. It reflects his endeavour to create musical
compositions using indigenous Brazilian elements together with his connections
to the European tradition of such masters as J.S. Bach. The Trio Klavis
instrumental setting would seem to be a far cry from that of No.5, which calls for eight
'cellos (Villa-Lobos' instrument) and soprano, using the voice both for
traditional singing of words and for wordless vocalise. Trio Klavis’
interpretation of the piece (with much
octave playing between violin and saxophone) nevertheless evoked the exquisite,
long-spun melodiousness and otherworldly mood of the ponderous opening, the work's
central section calling to mind folk-song sensibility and Brazilian
sensuousness, that of the poem by Brazilian writer Ruth Valadares CorrĂȘa (who
sang in its world premiere), the text being an ode to the moon's gentle rise against "the
drowsy, beautiful firmament”. On the return of the first section, Ferk
separates violin from saxophone, giving the mysterious moon-struck melody to
the latter.
Not often heard is Dmitri Shostakovich’s Trio No.1
Op.8 in C minor, written when the composer was still a student; he scored it
for violin, ‘cello and piano. Sabina Hasanova mentioned that the young
Shostakovich had fallen in love in 1923 and that this single-movement work
offers insight to this youthful experience, including the frustrations of
relationships. The young lady concerned was a certain Tatyana Filvenko from
Moscow, to whom the composer wrote: "It's dedicated to you, if you've no objections."
The Trio was first performed later that year at the Petrograd
Conservatory, with Shostakovich at the keyboard joined by fellow students.
Originally called "Poem for Violin, Violoncello and Fortepiano", this
title might conceal the fact that the 17-year-old Shostakovich was already a
master of form, weaving the work from a tight structure alluding to
sonata-form. The Trio Klavis players’ presentation of it gave vivid expression
to the play and contrast of the many aspects of this Romantic concert piece -
its tenderness, its plaintive sentimentality, its huge variety of textures
from featherweight utterances to heavy, urgent chordal clusters and sizable
tutti, affectionate melodies and wild, tumultuous, dancelike sections. The
artists took on board the technical challenges of the work, with Miha Ferk
here engaging in a little more vibrato playing than in the two previous works.
In honour of the festive season, Trio Klavis
performed “Forbidden Colours” from Ryuichi Sakamoto’s
soundtrack to the 1983
British-Japanese war film “Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence”. Sabina Hasanova
felt the item would be suitable to the many cultures of the people attending the
concert. A mood piece, the artists created its initial dreamy soundscape and
singing melodic lines, highlighting the subtle mix of Japanese- and western
music, then to spiral into a more substantial texture. Sealing what was indeed a festive, moving and exhilarating event, the program concluded
with an original composition of Miha Ferk, bearing the name of “Traubensaft”
(Grape Juice), an exuberant, jazzy, virtuosic piece with extensive keyboard
quotes from J.S.Bach’s “Well-Tempered Clavier” punctuated by other elements,
such as folk melodies from Ferk’s native Slovenia.
A unique and exceptional group of young
musicians, the Trio Klavis artists each have outstanding and versatile
individual careers. As an ensemble, they take on works of a great variety of styles, from
music of the Classical period to premiering contemporary works of living
composers, to performance of their own compositions. The Trio’s aim is to
expand the repertoire for the unusual combination of violin, piano and
saxophone. Its performance maintains the highest international standard, with
all works played by heart. In the Trio’s 2016 debut album - “Geography of
Sound” (Orlando Records) - the artists play classical works influenced by folk
music from around the world. Trio Klavis has been chosen to be NASOM (New
Austrian Sound of Music) artists for 2020-2021.
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