Quartets in the Forest

Wednesdays, July 20 & 27, 5:00 PM

Peter Hanson, violin; Adriane R. Post, violin; Sarah Darling, viola; Ezra Seltzer, cello

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN  Quartet for Strings in C Minor, Opus 18, No. 4
(1770 –1827)
CLAUDE DEBUSSY  Quartet for Strings in G Minor, Opus 10
(1862 –1918)

 

Program Notes

Beethoven, Quartet, Opus 18, No. 4

The String Quartet, Op. 18, No. 4 is one of the outstanding works of Beethoven’s so-called “early” period.

In 1799, Prince Lobkowitz commissioned Haydn — arguably the most famous living musician at the time — and Beethoven — the most promising composer of the younger generation — to compose sets of string quartets. Haydn had recently completed his Creation and was the acknowledged master of the quartet genre, having produced more than 60 of them during the past three decades. Beethoven came to Vienna in 1792 to establish himself as a virtuoso pianist and composer and studied with Haydn during the following two years. He had not yet produced string quartets, perhaps to avoid premature comparison with the established masters, Haydn and Mozart. Ultimately, Beethoven’s Six Quartets, Op. 18, published in 1801, would be his bold entrée into this genre in the new century.

The Quartet in C Minor, numbered No. 4, is actually the last of the six to be composed. This dark and angst-ridden key has a special association with Beethoven, connecting him to the sturm und drang of his predecessors. His previous works in C Minor included the last of the Piano Trios, Op. 1, and the Pathetique Sonata, and future explorations would produce the Third Piano Concerto, and most memorably, the Fifth Symphony. Drama is already abundant in the opening Allegro ma non tanto, with driving energy and extreme dynamics, occasionally relieved by the lyrical second theme first introduced by the second violin. Lacking a real slow movement, the middle movements seem to swap each other’s character: the Scherzo is relaxed and conversational, while the Menuetto has the power and speed usually applied to Beethoven’s scherzos. The final Allegro takes on the character of Hungarian gypsy music, with a turbocharged coda marked Prestissimo, which in this case means as fast as possible!

— Allen Whear

Debussy, Quartet for Strings in G Minor

Claude Debussy is a celebrated impressionist composer known for composing chamber music for unusual combinations of instruments. The String Quartet is, of course, a common combination for chamber music, and Debussy wrote only one.

Popularized by Haydn in the 1750s, string quartets were considered by many composers from the 18th to 20th century to be the true test of one’s composition abilities. Brahms reportedly put off writing his first string quartet for many years for fear that his quartets may be overshadowed by Beethoven’s 16 beloved string quartets. String quartets had been written in the German style since Haydn’s time. Debussy, however, was determined to compose in a distinctly French and personal style, so he mustn’t have compared his work to the infamous quartets by Beethoven or Brahms.

Debussy’s String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 10, composed when he was 31, is considered his first composition of importance. It is also the only piece in which the key and opus number are included in the title, presumably because this was the only work that he wrote following a conventional form. Although his String Quartet follows the traditional structure of the genre in terms of movements and tempos, Debussy masterfully transforms the experience entirely through his colorful writing. Like
many of Debussy’s masterpieces, this work is wildly imaginative, showcasing lush melodies fashioned from Medieval church modes as well as scales borrowed from Javanese gamelan. The organic, syncopated motifs which bind the piece together would have been refreshing and thought-provoking, or jarring and confusing, to audiences of the time. Even though the piece is labeled “G Minor,” Debussy isn’t shy about straying from the classical diatonic composition rules of centuries past.

As 20th century avant-garde composer Pierre Boulez said, Debussy’s String Quartet allowed the music to flow, free from “rigid structure, frozen rhetoric, and rigid aesthetics.” Reception ranged widely, but the piece withstood the test of time and became part of the standard repertory for professional quartets. This work unlocked new potential in the string quartet, altering how future composers might approach the daunting genre with an inventive, new perspective.

—Jennifer Candiotti

Tags:

Director

Peter Hanson
Peter Hanson

Date

Jul 27 2022

Time

5:00 pm

Starting at

$42.00

Featuring

  • Ezra Seltzer
    Ezra Seltzer
    Acting Principal Cello

    Hailed for his “scampering virtuosity” (American Record Guide) and “superb” playing (The New York Times), cellist Ezra Seltzer is the principal cellist of the Trinity Baroque Orchestra, New York Baroque Incorporated, the Sebastians, and Early Music New York. He has frequently appeared as guest principal cellist of Musica Angelica, the Washington National Cathedral Baroque Orchestra, and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, where he earned praise for his “delicate elegance and rambunctious spirit” (Twin Cities Pioneer Press).

  • Adriane R. Post
    Adriane R. Post
    Violin

    Adriane Post’s baroque violin playing has been described as “exquisite” by The New York Times. A founding member of ACRONYM Ensemble and Diderot String Quartet, she is sought after as leader, collaborator, and soloist across the United States. Concertmaster of the Washington National Cathedral Orchestra, co-concertmaster of Apollo’s Fire, soloist and collaborator with Four Nations Ensemble, Post appears as guest leader with groups such as Seraphic Fire and the Thirteen. A tenured member of Handel + Haydn Society, she performs with Trinity Wall Street Baroque Orchestra.

    This season has brought guest teaching engagements at Cincinnati Conservatory and the Smithsonian Institute, projects with The English Concert, Green Mountain Project, Les Délices and with Harry Bicket in collaboration with Diderot Quartet and festival debuts at the Utrecht and Boston Early Music Festivals.

    Post first fell in love with the baroque violin at Oberlin Conservatory, where she completed her Bachelor of Music. She received her Master of Music degree as a member or the first class of Juilliard’s Historical Performance program. Based in New York and Chicago, she was born and raised in northern Vermont.

  • Sarah Darling
    Sarah Darling
    Viola

    Described as “a tireless force of musical curiosity, skill, and enthusiasm” and “the one to up the ante” (Boston Musical Intelligencer), Sarah Darling enjoys a varied musical career, holding a variety of leading roles in A Far Cry, Musicians of the Old Post Road, Boston Baroque, Les Bostonades, Gut Reaction, and Antico Moderno, also performing with the Boston Early Music Festival, Emmanuel Music, Newton Baroque, Sarasa, and the Boston Ballet Orchestra.

    Sarah studied at Harvard, Juilliard, Amsterdam, Freiburg, and New England Conservatory, working with James Dunham, Karen Tuttle, Wolfram Christ, Nobuko Imai, and Kim Kashkashian. She has recorded old and new music for Linn, Paladino, Azica, MSR, and Centaur, plus a solo album on Naxos and two Grammy-nominated CDs on Crier Records.

    Sarah is active as a teacher and coach, on the faculty of the Longy School and serving as co-director of the Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra. She regularly shares her thoughts on music at her blog, Listening Deliberately.

  • Peter Hanson
    Peter Hanson
    Concertmaster and Director of Monday Main Concert

    Peter has been Concertmaster of Sir John Eliot Gardiner’s Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique since 1992, when they recorded their first complete set of Beethoven symphonies. He appeared as its Concertmaster soloist for European and U.S. tours of Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis, a 2017 BBC Proms performance of Berlioz’s Damnation of Faust, and in 2018, major European and U.S. tours of Berlioz. In 2020, they performed all the Beethoven symphonies in Barcelona and U.S. including sold-out concerts at the Carnegie Hall, New York.

    Peter formed The Eroica Quartet in 1993 with colleagues from the world of period instrument performance. The group immediately attracted attention with their vision of a revived Romantic approach to the string quartet literature, from Beethoven to Debussy. Their performance style was so unusual at the time that it struck listeners as radical. In 1997 they began their first Beethoven cycle, appearing at the City of London Festival and in the same year appeared at the Aix-les-Bains Nuits Romantiques Festival in France.

    The Eroica quickly became established, and toured extensively in the United Kingdom as well as making visits to France and the U.S. Their American debut was in Washington, D.C. and the New York debut was in February 2001, at the Frick Collection. For Harmonia Mundi USA they recorded the Mendelssohn and Schumann quartets and Beethoven quartets Op. 74, 95 and 135. For Resonus Classics, they recorded the original 1825 version of Mendelssohn’s Octet, Op. 20 and, more recently, the quartets by Debussy and Ravel. Released to coincide with the 150th anniversary of Debussy’s birth, this album represents the first modern recording of the works to feature performances on gut strings and with aspects of period performance.

    Peter is a concertmaster of the Carmel Bach Festival in California. His role includes chamber music performances, directing the string orchestra and appearing as Concertmaster for most of the Festival Orchestra concerts. The CBF orchestra is very flexible with regard to period and modern instruments and style; he recently gave performances of Vivaldi’s Four Seasons on baroque instruments at Hz415 followed by the Piazzola 4 seasons on modern (Hz440) in the second half of the same concert.

    Peter also appears as Director elsewhere; recent engagements include projects with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, Kymi Sinfonia from Finland and Orquesta da Camera in Spain. He was recently Guest Concertmaster with the Luxembourg Philharmonic, the Stockholm Radio Symphony Orchestra, and in 2017 was Guest Concertmaster for a Beethoven and Gade project with Concerto Copenhagen in 2019. He returned to Singapore for a new project in 2021.

Location

Church in the Forest
Church in the Forest
3152 Forest Lake Rd, Pebble Beach, CA 93953
Website
https://churchintheforest.org/

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