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The Madison String
Quartet
Musica de Camara
Museum of the City of New
York
April 11, 2010
Founded and
directed by Eva de La O, Musica de Camara has been presenting
Hispanic musicians for 30 years in concert halls, community
centers, churches, libraries and museums—often for audiences
with little access to classical music. One of its recent
discoveries is the Madison String Quartet, an adventurous,
enthusiastic young group dedicated to exploring the Hispanic
literature, for whose idiomatic rhythms and colors the players
have a natural affinity. The performance, apart from some
intonation problems in octaves and unisons, was admirable:
secure, well-balanced, expressive, homogeneous in sound,
unanimous in spirit.
In a quartet
arrangement of Four for Tango by Astor Piazzolla, the players
exploited all the resources of their instruments, including
harmonics, slides, and knocking on the wood to imitate
percussion. Teresa Carreno was born in Venezuela but spent most
of her life in France and Germany. One of the first great women
pianists and famous as a formidable virtuoso, she was also a
conductor, singer and composer. Her String Quartet in B minor
was written in the 1870’s during her marriage to the first of
her four husbands, the violinist Emile Sauret. A substantial,
four-movement work, it is clearly influenced by German
romanticism; the Scherzo recalls Mendelssohn, the slow movement
sings, the corner movements are fast, intense and turbulent. Its
weakness lies in the modulations, that ultimate test of
compositional skill. All four parts have demanding solos, which
the players negotiated with panache.
The program’s
most unusual work, which the Quartet recorded in 2004, was
Miguel del Aguila’s Life is a Dream, inspired by Caldéron de la
Barca’s play of the same title, La vida es sueno. It opened with
three players on stage producing eerie-sounding tremolos with
their bows behind the bridge; the first violinist, heard
off-stage playing very virtuosic music, eventually joined them.
All four musicians took turns reciting portions of Caldéron’s
poem while playing; the music built to an intense climax,
recapitulated the spooky beginning and faded away. The poetry
and the music are arresting enough to stand alone; they did not
seem to add anything to each other.
The audience
demanded and got an encore: Aldemoro Romero’s Fuga con Pajarillo,
Variations on a popular Venezuelan folksong. A fun piece, it
began like a Bach Contrapunctus and became an intricate maze of
multi-layered rhythms.
-Edith Eisler
for New York
Concert Review; New York, NY
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