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Review from The
Columbus Dispatch. Sunday, April 16, 2000. Quartet
hits high note at chamber society’s finale By Ralph O’Dette The American
String Quartet with guest David Thomas, principal clarinetist of the Columbus
Symphony Orchestra, brought the 52nd season of the Columbus Chamber Music
Society to a satisfying conclusion last night in the Southern Theatre. It seemed
fitting that the staunch defender of the heart of classical music would offer
Haydn, Mozart and Brahms to cap the current season. The concert
opened with Haydn's Quartet in F-sharp Minor, Op. 50, No. 4. This rare-for-Haydn
minor-key piece is darker and more serious than most of the 83 quartets by the
astonishingly productive composer. The players
invested the first movement with a kind of unsettling energy until near the end
when the sun suddenly breaks through in a major key. The slow movement
alternated shades of light and dark. The minuet males one marvel that Haydn
wrote hundreds of the classic dances and made each one interesting and
different. The finale was also different -- dramatic
and a bit academic compared with the usual joyful dancelike finales by this
composer. In a program
reordering, Mozart's marvelous Quintet in A Major, K. 581 followed the
Haydn. The problem with this arrangement is that almost any music that follows
the Mozart is a letdown. With Thomas in top form and the strings responding as
though the five had always played together, this was a deeply satisfying
performance. There is a brief descending scale passage in the fifth variation of
the last movement that, for me, still is
heart-stopping after innumerable hearings. Ah, that Mozart. | CCMS Home | Index of Reviews | 1999-2000 Season |
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