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SoNoRo Festival Bucharest
Ensemble Raro:
Diana Ketler, piano; Alexander Sitkovetsky, violin;
Razvan Popovici, viola; Bernhard Naoki Heidenborg, cello;
Roxana Constantinescu, guest mezzo-soprano
Zankel Hall at
Carnegie Hall
New York, NY
February 16, 2010
Formed in
2004, Ensemble Raro (named after Master Raro, the wise old
arbiter of Schumann’s imaginary Davidsbündler) must be one of
the best, most versatile young groups before the public.
Resident Ensemble of the SoNoRo Festival, founded in 2006 by
violist Popovici, the group appears in concert halls world-wide;
this was its New York debut. SoNoRo has released two recordings,
and fosters living composers through performances, and young
musicians through scholarships.
The players of
Ensemble Raro, who also pursue individual, solo, chamber music
and teaching careers, are splendid technically, musically and
communicatively, making this a true collaboration of equals.
Although they were born and trained in different countries,
their rapport is so close that they seem to share and anticipate
one another’s whims and wishes; the strings’ tone, which is warm
and expressive, blends together without losing its variety or
individual timbre, and their intonation is impeccable, as they
take over lines imperceptibly on the same note. Totally immersed
in the music, they never call attention to themselves by sound
or gesture. The only flaw, endemic to this combination, is the
balance, which favors the (wide-open) piano, despite pianist
Ketler’s obvious sensitivity.
Their program
featured two novelties by Enescu and Peteris Vasks. Enescu’s
Sept chansons de Clément Marot combines Romanian folk
melodies with medieval modes and elegant French sophistication.
Mezzo-soprano Constantinescu and pianist Ketler brought out the
songs’ different character and moods beautifully. Born in 1946,
Peteris Vasks gained recognition in the 1990s and has received
several European honors and prizes. His Piano Quartet
(2000-2001) is extremely difficult and almost unremittingly
intense. The strings often alternate with the piano in textures
featuring solos, duets, chordal unisons, long glissandi, double
stops, and drones. Some of its six movements flow together, some
are obsessively repetitive, and all have powerful climaxes (Vasks
calls one “a black hole”). The Raro Ensemble introduced it in
Germany and England; in this New York premiere, their
performance was committed and authoritative.
The players’
youthful romanticism showed to fine advantage in a wonderfully
spontaneous, exuberant, expressive but unsentimental performance
of Schumann’s Piano Quartet. But the playing of the slow
movement of Brahms’ C Minor Piano Quartet as an encore was even
more impressive for its deeply felt inwardness.
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Edith
Eisler; New York Concert Review; New York, NY
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