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Texas Music Festival's opening concert has it both ways

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  • Texas Music Festival's opening concert has it both ways

    Houston Chronicle, TX
    June 9 2005

    Texas Music Festival's opening concert has it both ways
    By CHARLES WARD


    CLASSICAL/NEOCLASSICAL, the opening concert of the 2005 Texas Music
    Festival, was an engaging illustration of a basic instinct in art:
    having cake and eating it, too.


    Arts aficionados love to appear up-to-date without sacrificing
    tradition. In classical music, that's been played out in such
    20th-century styles as neoclassicism and neoromanticism. Composers
    used essential musical traits of those historic periods to make
    (conservative) sense out of the riot-like expansion of melody,
    harmony and form in the last century.

    Two "classic" works for strings framed Tuesday's concert at the
    University of Houston Moores Opera House: Michael Haydn's Quintet in
    C Major, P. 108, and Mozart's Quintet in C Major, K. 515. Both
    expanded the string quartet with an extra viola.

    In the program's opening work, Haydn, the young brother of Franz
    Joseph Haydn, set out the parameters efficiently. The forms were
    clear-cut but developed via some very entrancing music.

    In the Mozart quintet, the forms and style were expressed in suave
    and sophisticated terms. Charm was never far away - the last movement
    was toe-tapping good - but the music had a depth of feeling and
    intelligence that Haydn's lacked.

    Both performances featured violinists Kenneth Goldsmith and Lucie
    Robert, violists Rita Porfiris and Karen Ritscher, and cellist Kevin
    Dvorak. Their ensemble playing wasn't always tidy, but they conveyed
    the spirit of the music very well.

    Paul Hindemith was a proponent of practicality and conservatism in
    20th-century composition. Though key works have an elegant beauty,
    others can be thornier. The Quartet (1938) for violin, clarinet,
    cello and piano was one of those, at least on Tuesday.

    British clarinetist David Palmer played gorgeously in terms of tone
    and expression, but he was way too timid and deferential to the other
    players (Goldsmith, Dvorak and pianist Timothy Hester). His
    reluctance to lead when the clarinet had key melodies threw balance
    out of kilter. The piano ended up dominating too much.

    Armenian-born and Russian-trained cellist Vagram Saradjian offered
    the American premiere of the Suite for Solo Cello by Armenian
    composer Levon Chaoushian. Stylistically, the work was faintly rooted
    in tonality but generally strayed further from the ideals of
    neoclassicism than Hindemith's.

    Saradjian is always an intensely involved performer and he dug into
    the music with his customary exuberance. The music exploded from his
    strings, though the physicality of his playing produced too many
    extraneous sounds.
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