REVIEW: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

Technically flawless is the only way to describe Friday evening’s performance at Rackham Auditorium by pianist Wu Han, violinist Daniel Hope, violist Paul Neubauer, and cellist David Finckel of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Each of the performers are highly accomplished musicians in their own right – just to give you an idea, Mr. Neubauer was appointed principal violist of the New York Philharmonic at age 21, and Mr. Finckel was the cellist of the Emerson String Quartet for 34 seasons. As a group, their music-making demanded the audience’s attention from the very first note, refusing to relinquish it until the concert’s conclusion.

The program consisted of piano quartets, which, counterintuitively, consist of a piano, violin, viola, and cello.

The first piece, Quartet in a minor for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello, Op. 1 by Josef Suk, was written by the composer when he was a seventeen-year-old student of Antonín Dvořák. With a dramatic first movement, ethereal and dreamlike second movement that fades into nothingness, and a third movement that is jarring, the piece concluded to rapturous applause.

The second piece, Johannes Brahms’s Quartet No. 3 in c minor for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello, Op. 60, was one filled with an underlying tension that never quite left the music, even during the sections that could be described as more tranquil. It was during this piece that I specifically noted Ms. Han’s skill on the piano – her fingers seemed to dance across the keys with extraordinary lightness.

The final programmed piece was Quartet in E-flat Major for Piano, Violin, Viola, and Cello, Op. 87 by Antonín Dvořák. However, the audience, thoroughly captured by the evening’s performance, called for and was granted an encore of Dvořák’s Bagatelles, Op. 47, V. Poco allegro. The piece was announced from the stage. It was noted, to the audience’s amused laughter, that Dvořák composed it when his publisher insisted that he work on something more popular than what he had been working on (he had been working on his Slavonic Dances, which are famous even today).

After the concert, the performers came out into the lobby of Rackham Auditorium to sign albums and interact with audience members. It is always fascinating to hear artists discuss their work, which is not usually an opportunity after classical performances!

Overall, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center presented an evening of music of impeccable quality that was greatly enjoyed by the audience!

PREVIEW: SMTD@UMMA Performance: Press A-Flat to Play

If you are interested in video game music, then this event might be for you! On Sunday, January 27th at 8pm, join SMTD and UMMA in the University of Michigan Museum of Art museum apse (the main hall where you first enter) for what promises to be an intriguing and challenging performance.

“In response to the Virtual Worlds considered in the exhibition Art in the Age of the Internet, SMTD professor and video game music specialist Matthew Thompson explores the dichotomy of real/unreal in a live performance of new analog transcriptions of favorite video game soundtracks, joined by undergraduate and graduate piano students from his studio. ”

Admission is free, so don’t miss it!

 

PREVIEW: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

Calling all chamber music enthusiasts! This coming Friday, January 25 at 8 pm, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center will be performing at Rackham Auditorium. The program includes piano quartets by Brahms and Dvořák, as well as by composer and violinist Josef Suk.

Hailing from New York City, the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center is known for its excellence, and I am very excited to see them perform! The evening’s ensemble will consist of Daniel Hope, Paul Neubauer, and Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center artistic directors Wu Han and David Finckel.

Tickets may be purchased online at the University Musical Society’s website, or at the Michigan League ticket office. As is always the case for UMS events, student tickets are just $12 or $20!

REVIEW: SMTD Collage Concert

Advertised as an evening of non-stop performances, SMTD’s 42nd annual Collage Concert certainly lived up to expectations. Featuring Symphony Band, University Symphony Orchestra, Chamber Choir, Orpheus Singers, Digital Music Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, and numerous other groups of students from within the School of Music, Theatre & Dance, I was thoroughly impressed by the professionalism of the production.

For one thing, if you’ve ever been to a collage-style concert before, you may be picturing a performance where half the time is spent waiting for set changes or performers to get to their places. This could not have been farther from the truth. The evening was truly exhilarating in the fact that there were quite literally no open spaces, or even a space to breathe, within the program. It was a wild ride of performance after performance, rapid-fire, with no breaks save intermission. The concert opened with a work called “Sound Piece” performed by the Digital Music Ensemble, and before the last note had finished ringing in Hill Auditorium, or before I could even realize what was happening, Symphony Band had already dropped the down beat of “War” from War and Peace by Michael Daugherty. The logistics and planning that go into the production of Collage must be mind-blowing, and yet it was pulled off without a hitch. The lighting changed, performers switched places on stage, and instruments were moved, all without the audience taking note.

I particularly enjoyed that the concert showcased the full range of SMTD’s performing arts spectrum – music, dance, musical theater, and theatre. The Collage Concert was an opportunity to experience the offerings of groups that I might not otherwise hear or see perform.

One of the most impressive, and entertaining, performances was Melissa Coppola and Annie Jeng’s rendition of Franz Liszt’s “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2.” The penultimate performance, it was the one act for which the audience broke out in applause, despite the request in the program to “please hold applause until the end of each half!” Not only was it a virtuosic performance, the entire piece was a theatrical production in which Ms. Coppola and Ms. Jeng comically gesticulated and shoved at each other. At one point one shoved the other off the piano bench and onto the floor. Near the end of the piece, there is a section of repeated ascending scales in which one performer played a scale, went running from the end of the piano bench, around the piano, and to the other side of the bench, all while her counterpart played the next scale, only to arrive to the bench again to smoothly play the next scale while the other performer ran around the piano, and so the cycle continued. At the conclusion of the piece, the two high-fived at the playing of the final chord. Perhaps most impressive was that amid all the show and staged chaos, the piece was being played smoothly and expertly, such that it would have been stunning even without the theatrics!

Another of my favorite pieces performed was “Nimrod” from Elgar’s Enigma Variations. An orchestral classic, it is melancholy, thickly orchestrated, and a pleasure to listen to.

I expected a great concert, but the Collage Concert far surpassed my expectations. It was a fantastic evening that I thoroughly enjoyed, and the two hours that it ran for passed in the blink of an eye!

PREVIEW: Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Linocuts by Meredith Stern

 

If you’ve never heard of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, you aren’t alone. Meredith Stern’s prints, currently on display in the Special Collections Research Center of Hatcher Graduate library, are meant to raise awareness of the document and commemorate its 75th anniversary. The exhibition will continue through February 1, 2019.

In 1948, in the aftermath of World War II, the United Nations General Assembly adopted a document, called the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, meant to define the rights that every person is entitled to – rights known as human rights. These include rights such as equality, freedom of religion, and access to food and shelter. There are thirty rights total outlined in the document. Largely the result of the efforts of former first lady and U.N. ambassador Eleanor Roosevelt, the document’s purpose was to prevent egregious transgressions against humanity as occurred during World War II. You can read the full document here.

The issue with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is that is isn’t law. Just read the news, and it becomes obvious that there are people whose human rights are violated on a daily basis.

Visit the exhibition Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Linocuts by Meredith Stern to enjoy some art and increase your awareness of human rights. Each of the prints illustrates one article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and there are a total of 14 on display.

The exhibition is free and open to all. The Special Collections Research Center is on the sixth floor of Hatcher Graduate Library, and it open from 9am to 5pm on weekdays.

PREVIEW: SMTD Collage Concert

Want to go to a performance, but not sure you want to commit to several hours of the same thing? Join the School of Music, Theatre & Dance for the annual Collage Concert, which will take place on Saturday, January 19 at 8 pm in Hill Auditorium.

“The event’s design is unique, featuring all ensembles and departments of the School performing one arresting work after another in rapid-fire order.” This means that you can expect to experience some amazing performances of classical music, jazz, theater, musical theater, vocal music, dance, and more.

Don’t miss this SMTD tradition. Tickets may be purchased online, or at the Michigan League Ticket Office (open 10am – 1pm on Saturdays). Seating is reserved, and tickets are just $12 for students, or $34 or $28 for non-students, depending seat location.