Aylesbury Lunchtime Music presents
Dogoda Quintet
7 November 2024
Starts: 12:45pm, Doors: 12:15pm
Duration: 1 hour (approx.)
£7 adults on the door (<18s & carers free)
Programme
-
1871-1942
A pupil of both Schoenberg and Mahler, Alexander Zemlinsky was an Austrian composer and conductor who notably taught composition to Berg, Webern and Korngold. Whilst not hugely prolific, his corpus of works, initially Brahmsian in style, has struggled to achieve the fame that they arguably deserve. With his later pieces. containing intense concentration of emotion, this light work is very much an aberration.
A single movement rondo, the music features constant bubbly chatter democratically passing around the group, the ultimate wind quintet manifestation of Goethe’s quote of the string quartet being “four rational people in conversation.” This often creates the effect of orchestral soli passages for, for instance, “two flutes,” or “two horns.”
-
Sally Beamish is one of the UK’s most distinguished composer’s with a catalogue of works for soloists such as Hakan Hardenberger, Martin Frost, Steven Isserlis and Janine Jansen. Originally a viola player in the London Sinfonietta and Academy of St Martin in the Fields, she moved to Scotland in 1990 to focus on composition. Her output contains many pieces for saxophone(s) and for viola, in addition to three oratorios and many concertos.
This is her second wind quintet, with the first, “The Naming of Birds,” written for the Reykjavik Wind quintet in 2001. This work however, was initially commissioned purely as an arrangement rather than a fresh composition.
“When the New London Chamber Ensemble asked me to make an arrangement of this Mozart ‘Adagio’, I was much taken with the glass harmonica performances I found on Youtube! I wanted to try and capture some of the strange beauty of the instrument. I used cor anglais rather than oboe to give a warm, dark quality to the quintet – but didn’t want to add anything of my own, as the music is so complete. However, when I’d finished, I had the impulse to launch into a set of variations, and here I cast each of the five instruments in turn as a soloist, sometimes with a duo partner. The Adagio theme returns at the end, with each player adding a fragment from its own variation.”
Sally BeamishThe piece was first performed at the Wigmore Hall, London, by the New London Chamber Ensemble, in July 2011.
-
1901-1953
Suite for Wind Quintet (Crawford Seeger)
i Allegretto, ii Lento rubato, iii Allegro possibile – Andante – Allegro – meno mosso – Tempo primoCrawford-Seeger is notable not just for the gender barries she overcame as a female composer of her era, but also for her pioneering modernism, effectively linking the idioms of Charles Ives and Elliot Carter, and her championing of folk music. Born in Ohio, Ruth Crawford trained as a pianist before her composition talent was spotted by fellow composer Henry Cowell, who arranged for her lessons in New York with Charles Seeger, who she later married. After travelling to Europe in 1931-32 on the first Guggenheim fellowship for composition awarded to a woman, she worked transcribing and publishing field recordings of folk songs by John and Alan Lomax in addition to teaching and raising four children. She however produced few compositions during this period. The suite for wind quintet dates from her “late period” after her composition break ended in the late 1940s and is a good reflection of her modernist methods such as serialism in practice earlier in her career.
The first movement is based off a single funky ostinato introduced in the first bar by the bassoon. After the other instruments have built up the textre, a ferocious sempre accelerando passage in unison without the horn provides the height of the movemement, after which the ostinato returns for a gradual wind-down.
Initiating with dramatic question and answer phrases, the short but rhythmically complex second movement features strained impassioned lyricism comparable to that of Alban Berg. This movement also climaxes with a unison ff passage, this time including the horn.
The third movement is arguably in a kind of rondo form, with the “theme” being a punchy and rapid unison passage for flute and bassoon. Between statements of this there are slower quieter interludes featuring the other three instruments in the ensemble.
-
1841-1904
String Quartet in F Major Op. 96 “American” (Dvořák)
i Allegro ma non troppo, ii Lento, iii Molto Vivace, iv Vivace ma non troppoOften considered the greatest Czech composer of classical music, Antonin Dvorak took over from his compatriot Bedrich Smetana (1824-84,) as the music voice of a region struggling for national identity in the face of prolongued rule by the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Mentored by Brahms, he was reportedly such a fanatic for newly developing train travel that he once declared that he would “gladly trade all his symphonies in order to have been the inventory of the locomotiv steam engine.”
Thankfully, this would still leave us with this great work. It is certainly the most famous of Dvorak’s string quartets, even more so after the third movement’s feature in the 2019 “Little Women” film. Written in 1893 during his visit to the United States alongside the String Quintet in Eb and the G Major Violin Sonatina, Dvorak desired all three to be “something really melodious and simple.”
The first movement, in sonata form, begins with a sunny pentatonic melody, originally for viola, but played here on the bassoon. But whilst the secondary theme (introduced by the clarinet) has a similar simplicity, the landscape that this movement presents is bound together by many sudden bursts of “storm on the prairie.”
The second movement begins with multiple similar ingredients to the first- a misty moving accompaniment is set up before a folk-like melody enters and clarifies the pulse. But this time we have more of a minor-mode nightscape, which climaxes are always quick to settle back down into more peaceful musical motion, grounded by the flowing semiquavers continuing right through from the first bar until the start of the coda. This arrangement features striking Verdi-style blending of the flute and the oboe into a single voice.
The third movement launches with four bars of pentatonic call and response as the motto theme of a fast minuet offset by beat to provide a rustic flavouring. In this version, the clarinet and flute are chosen for the deadpan beginning, of the trio section, which then erupts with almost violent rhythmic energy. The reprise of the minuet notably features bird calls which help set up the atmosphere for the finale.
The closing movement is essentially an American country “square dance,” with two introspective interludes. Once again melodies are essentially pentatonic, cementing the unity of the whole work. The coda gives the impression of the dance party spinning slightly out of control with enthusiasm, but with all remaining well.
David Walter is a French conductor, composer, oboist and arranger, with the latter two activities combined for his part in “Quintette Moragues.” His arrangement takes advantage of many of Dvorak’s motifs and melodies here working even more idiomatically for strings than for winds, notably the flute bird calls and rustic oboe sound.
Performers
-
Dogoda Quintet
Wind ensemble
Formed at the Royal Academy of Music after playing together as principals in the National Youth Orchestra, Dogoda Quintet is fast becoming recognised as an up-and-coming ensemble of its generation of the UK chamber music scene.
Key information for concert goers
When
Every Thursday at 12:45pm (except August & over Christmas). Performances last around 60 minutes. Please enter quietly as there is a noon service in the Lady Chapel.
How much?
Entry is £7 per adult (card or cash), under 18s and carers are free. The price includes a programme. Donations are welcomed to subsidise the larger ensembles.
Where?
Performances are at St Mary’s Church in the heart of Aylesbury Old Town. See directions for further details.
Do I need to book?
No, just turn up. Doors open at 12:15 pm. Make sure you arrive in good time to get a seat.