Author: VRS

  • PROGRAM NOTES: DANISH STRING QUARTET

    PROGRAM NOTES: DANISH STRING QUARTET

    The Art of Fugue Fugue is the Rubik’s cube of compositional genres. It’s the sort of thing that only the ‘brainiest’ of modern composers, one with a bent for antiquarian curiosities, would attempt. And yet in its golden age in the first half of the 18th century, fugue writing was commonplace, an expected skill for…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN GERHAHER & GEROLD HUBER

    PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN GERHAHER & GEROLD HUBER

    By Christian Gerhaher This programme of poems by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe set to music by Franz Schubert and Wolfgang Rihm was conceived as a tribute to the eight great poetic hymns written during the poet’s Sturm und Drang period of the 1770s and 1780s. I had always regretted that Schubert had set only three…

  • VRS 2014-15 SEASON BROCHURE
  • PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF

    PROGRAM NOTES: CHRISTIAN TETZLAFF

    Eugène Ysaÿe
 Sonata for solo violin in G minor, Op. 27, No. 1 Belgian violinist and composer Eugène Ysaÿe stands as
a bridge figure between the late Romantic era of virtuoso violinists such as Henri Vieuxtemps and Henryk Wieniawski (he studied with both of them), and twentieth-century composers such as Debussy, whom he championed.
Much loved by…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: CHARLIE ALBRIGHT

    PROGRAM NOTES: CHARLIE ALBRIGHT

      Franz Schubert Impromptus Op. 90, Nos. 1-4 The impromptu is just one of a number of small-scale instrumental genres arising in the early 19th century, known under the collective title of “character pieces”. Cultivated by composers of the Romantic era, these pieces present a simple musical idea in an intimate lyrical style with the…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: DANIEL MÜLLER-SCHOTT & SIMON TRPČESKI

    PROGRAM NOTES: DANIEL MÜLLER-SCHOTT & SIMON TRPČESKI

    Ludwig van Beethoven
 Sonata for cello & piano in C major, Op. 102, No. 1 Those who think of sonata form as a well-organized dinner plate – with the red meat in one corner, the mashed potatoes stationed opposite, and peas or broccoli distributed neatly over the remaining space – might be forgiven for thinking…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: PINCHAS ZUKERMAN & YEFIM BRONFMAN

    PROGRAM NOTES: PINCHAS ZUKERMAN & YEFIM BRONFMAN

    Franz Schubert Sonatina for violin & piano in A minor  D. 385 It humbles me to think, paraphrasing Tom Lehrer, that when Schubert was my age, he had already been dead for several decades.  Lest I forget, there are his first three sonatas for violin and piano, which he composed in a sprint of creative…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: IESTYN DAVIES & THOMAS DUNFORD

    PROGRAM NOTES: IESTYN DAVIES & THOMAS DUNFORD

      The golden age of English lute song coincides with the public career of lutenist and composer John Dowland – and not by chance: from the publication of his First Booke of Songes in 1597 until his death in 1626, Dowland initiated, nourished, and crowned, a flowering of popular song unprecedented in the history of…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: BRAHMS FESTIVAL

    PROGRAM NOTES: BRAHMS FESTIVAL

    CONCERT #1 Johannes Brahms String Quartet in C minor, Op. 51, No. 1 If there was one great figure in European music that Brahms revered more than any other, that figure was Ludwig van Beethoven. With the Great Master’s bust looking impassively down on him from the wall of his Vienna apartment, feeling behind him…

  • PROGRAM NOTES: YO-YO MA & KATHRYN STOTT

    PROGRAM NOTES: YO-YO MA & KATHRYN STOTT

    Igor Stravinsky Suite Italienne At the end of the Great War Igor Stravinsky underwent a radical shift in his compositional techniques and aesthetic aims. Gone were the gargantuan orchestras that had performed the lush, colorful scores of his pre-War ballets Firebird and Petrushka. Gone, as well, the dense chord structures and revolutionary rhythmic tumult that…