Mozart, Nielsen, Neidich & Schoenberg - 09/27/15

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Mozart, Nielsen, Neidich & Schoenberg - 09/27/15

Conductor: Dongmin Kim
Mozart: Divertimento in B-flat, K. 137
Nielsen: Clarinet Concerto Op. 57
(Charles Neidich: Clarinet)
Neidich: Scherzissimo for Clarinet and Strings
(Charles Neidich: Clarinet) 
Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night), Op. 4


After the expected lull of late summer, the official season has finally been kicked into high gear in concert halls and opera houses around the city, and after a rousing concert by the New York Philharmonic on Friday night, this afternoon I was more than ready for the smaller but no less blazingly talented New York Classical Players in a typically eclectic program including well-known entities such as Mozart, Schoenberg and Nielsen, and the bonus discovery du jour, Charles Neidlich, doing double duty as clarinetist and composer. 

So just as the sun was coming out, the temperature was moving slightly up and the city was navigable again, I took a walk across a bustling Central Park and joined an eager crowd in the orchestra's unofficial Manhattan home of the Church of the Heavenly Rest on the Upper East Side for yet another free concert by this unique group of dedicated and selfless young musicians. 

The concert safely opened with Mozart and the Divertimento in B-flat, K. 137 that he wrote when he was a rapidly maturing 16-year old prodigy tirelessly travelling all over Europe. As the NYCP's string players put their expert skills to work, they did full justice to the genuinely attractive piece, brightly highlighting the highly melodic nature of the composition while also displaying Mozart's solid sense of his own structure as well as an uncanny dramatic flair. 

Carl August Nielsen's Clarinet Concerto Op. 57 turned out to be a non-stop 30-minute conversation, sometimes friendly, sometimes confrontational, but for sure never boring, between the soloist and the orchestra. Only a true virtuoso would be able to come out of this worthy predicament alive, and luckily for us the NYCP had solicited the right one in acclaimed clarinetist, composer, conductor and teacher Charles Neidich. Stormingly asserting itself, playfully flitting around or pensively reflecting, the clarinet boldly held its own and treated the audience to a mesmerizing demonstration of its wide range of possibilities. The strings, however, did not let their guest star steal the entire show and performed with plenty of countering power for a totally enjoyable battle. 

After a well-deserved break during the intermission, Charles Neidich was back onstage with the orchestra for his own Scherzissimo for Clarinet and Strings, a short work he composed in 1999 for Elliot Carter's 91st birthday. Tonally based on the notes E, C, B, and B-flat for roughly Elliott, Carter, Happy and Birthday, this outstanding birthday gift had its New York premiere this afternoon, virtuosically flying around in all directions to everyone's delight. 

The concert ended with a magnificent rendition of Anton Schoenberg's lushly Romantic Verklärte Nacht, the one work of his that keeps on reminding the world that the ground-breaking inventor of the often off-putting 12-tone technique was also capable of churning out an amazing wealth of richly lyrical sounds, which would have no doubt made Brahms and Wagner turn green with jealousy. Inspired by a poem by Richard Dehmel, in which a woman confesses to her lover that she bears another man's child and he gently forgives her as they walk under the moonlight, Verklärte Nacht takes this highly dramatic background to create a whole world of intense emotions and gorgeous sounds lavishly unfolding in one sweeping and – Yes! – transfiguring movement. And there's nothing like a little transfiguration on a lovely fall Sunday afternoon.

Written by Isabelle Dejean (September 27, 2015)

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Barber, Kim, Bruch, Schubert & Wolf - 05/01/15

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Barber, Kim, Bruch, Schubert & Wolf - 05/01/15

Conductor: Dongmin Kim 
Samuel Barber: Adagio for Strings, Op. 11 
Jeeyoung Kim: Lullaby of the Waves 
Max Bruch: Double Concerto for Violin and Viola in E Minor, Op. 88 

(Siwoo Kim: Violin Richard Yongje O'Neill: Viola) 
Franz Schubert: Arpeggione Sonata for Viola and Strings 
(Richard Yongje O'Neill: Viola) 
Hugo Wolf: Italian Serenade


After saying "Auf Wiedersehen und bis bald" to Anne-Sophie Mutter at Carnegie Hall on Tuesday evening, on Friday evening it was time to say "Good-bye until next season" to The New York Classical Players as well, and most of all "Thank you" for making such fabulous music free for all, everywhere they perform, all the time. My last concert with them was going to be conveniently located walking distance from my place at the W83 Concert Hall and present a program that, as it is often the case with them, ran a wide spectrum from a well-known piece like Barber's "Adagio for Strings" to the NYCP-commissioned world premiere of Jeeyoung Kim's "Lullaby of the Waves". 

Here again, the ensemble had clearly decided to close their busy season with a resounding bang, and they found the perfect soloist for that in Korean-American violist Richard Yongje O'Neill. Although he may not be a household name in the US, the highly successful musician comes with a fascinating personal history and a glowing resume that includes prestigious schools, numerous awards and wide-ranging collaborations as well as commercial modeling, marathon running, book authoring and school founding, among many other occupations. His extensive popularity with the Korean community was on full display on Friday evening as my friend Angie and I took our seats among a very excited audience that was rapidly filling up the understated but welcoming 900-seat concert hall. 

One of the most subtly gripping compositions for strings ever, Barber's "Adagio for Strings" owes its enduring popularity to its intrinsic musical quality, of course, but also to its being played during many historical events and featured on many soundtracks, beside having been chosen as the first American work Toscanini ever conducted in 1938, that is. But when all is said and done, there is nothing like attending a pristine rendition of it to really experience the genuine heartstring pulling power of its simple, but profound poignancy. And that is just what happened on Friday night, when the orchestra's playing kept the beautiful elegy resolutely understated and still mightily effective. 

The sober mood carried over to the next, completely unknown work, which was also dealing with the notions of loss and comfort. Jeeyoung Kim's "Lullaby of the Waves", however, did not linger on melancholic feelings too long and before we knew it, the music perked up and the gentle lyricism became more playful, with the musicians handling this brand new challenge with the same authority as if it were a regular concert staple. 

Back on familiar territory with German Romantic master Max Bruch and his "Double Concerto for Violin and Viola", we finally got the opportunity to hear special guest Richard Yongje O'Neill engage in a lively conversation with NYCP member Siwoo Kim while enjoying the solid background provided by the orchestra. All those fired-up string players were obviously having a swell time together and spontaneously shared their joy of playing with the audience. 

The real test for Richard Yongje O'Neill, however, came with the next piece, Schubert's "Arpeggione Sonata for Viola and Strings", in which the viola finally got to brightly shine during an all too rare star turn. Taking full advantage of it, O'Neill gave a performance that was probably one of the most successful advertisements ever for the impressive possibilities of the often unfairly neglected instrument as he was expertly negotiating the endless twists and turns of Schubert's truly delightful composition. This remarkable feat was enthusiastically rewarded by a long and loud rock star-worthy ovation.

The official concert concluded with Hugo Wolf's short, but highly melodic and blissfully care-free "Italian Serenade", which had everybody smiling and eventually provided the perfect balance for the heart-rending concert opening. 

Since the NYCP would never let us go without one last, memorable gift, we got to relish their vibrant strings for one last time this season with the third movement of Janacek’s "Suite for Strings", complete with a young audience member’s unexpected – but timely – intervention. A spontaneous and uplifting send-off if there ever was one.

Written by Isabelle Dejean (May 4, 2015)

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