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Schneider Concerts Presents | Ivalas Quartet and celebrated Guests

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Collage Imange. Top L-smiling Anthony McGill (black man) wearing stylish dark gray suit with satin lapels and satin tie, looks and gestures to his left, holding a clarinet; Top. R. Ayane Kozasa (Asian woman) wearing a black jacket that is colorfully embroidered with flowers, holds a bow and glances up to her right. Bottom. Wearing formal outfits, the smiling members of Ivalas Quartet (l. to r. Latino man, black woman, MENA man, black man) stand before a light grey background holding their instruments.

Ivalas Quartet with Anthony McGill and Ayane Kozasa

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Schneider Concerts Presents | Ivalas Quartet and celebrated Guests

Ivalas Quartet with
Anthony McGill, clarinet

Ayane Kozasa, viola


Brahms: Viola Quintet No. 2 in G Major, Op. 111 (1891)
Dvorak: String No. 12 in F Major, Op. 96  "American" (1893)

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: Clarinet Quintet, Op. 10 (1895)

 

The concert will be approximately one hour and 50 minutes, including intermission.

Presented by the Mannes School of Music at the College of Performing Arts.

By joining this online event, you acknowledge the session is recorded, you acknowledge that by participating, your name, phone number, and profile picture might be visible to the public. You can customize your personal information when creating your Zoom account. The New School may use any recorded material from the event.

Getting Here

Cost

$20 - general admission

$17 - seniors and those with disabilities

NOTE: Seats are not assigned - please contact us prior to the concert if you have specific seating needs (see accessibility section below).


Student tickets: A limited number of $5 stand-by tickets will be made available for students with student ID at 1pm on the day of the concert.


New School Community: Register for a single, non-transferrable, advance ticket with N# using the tickets sales form. You will be asked to present school ID upon entry to event.
 

Please note: we will not be mailing tickets and will check registered ticket buyers in at the event, beginning one hour before the concert. We will send periodic reminders regarding your upcoming event.

Accessibility

The venue is ADA compliant. Accessible seating, large print programs, and assistive listening devices available. The 66 W. 12th Street (between 5th and 6th avenues) venue address is valid for Access-a-Ride.


We do not assign seats to the general public, however, if you have an accessibility-related seating need, we will make sure you get the seat you need.


Requests for additional accommodations can be made at time of ticket purchase.


Any questions? Call +1 212.229.5873 or contact nsc@newschool.edu

Health & Safety Information

We do not currently have any coronavirus protocols in place, but do recommend masking.


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zelter string quartet

Collage Imange. Top L-smiling Anthony McGill (black man) wearing stylish dark gray suit with satin lapels and satin tie, looks and gestures to his left, holding a clarinet; Top. R. Ayane Kozasa (Asian woman) wearing a black jacket that is colorfully embroidered with flowers, holds a bow and glances up to her right. Bottom. Wearing formal outfits, the smiling members of Ivalas Quartet (l. to r. Latino man, black woman, MENA man, black man) stand before a light grey background holding their instruments.



Hailed by The Strad for playing with “tremendous heart and beauty,” the Ivalas Quartet has been changing the face of classical music since its inception at the University of Michigan in 2017. The Ivalas Quartet has been featured on concert series including, Community Concerts at Second in Baltimore, Friends of Chamber Music Denver, Detroit’s WRCJ Classical Brunch, the inaugural Detroit Music Weekend, the Davidson College Concert Series in North Carolina, the Crested Butte Music Festival, the Walla Walla Chamber Music Festival, the Great Lakes Center for the Arts, the Blue Sage Center for the Arts, and CU Presents concert series where the quartet performed alongside the Takács Quartet in 2020 and 2022. Ivalas won the first prize at the 2019 WDAV Young Chamber Musicians Competition in Davidson, NC, as well as the grand prize at the 2022 Coltman Chamber Music Competition in Austin, TX.


Ayane Kozasa, violist of the Cavini Quartet, is a sought-after chamber musician, collaborator, and educator. Since winning the 2011 Primrose International Viola Competition—Ayane has appeared on stages across the world, from Carnegie, Wigmore, and Suntory Hall to Ravinia, Aspen, and the Marlboro Music Festival. As a founding member of the Aizuri Quartet for 11 years, she developed her skills of launching a brand new ensemble. The quartet was the 2018 quartet-in-residence at the Metropolitan Museum and the grand prize winners of both the Osaka International String Quartet Competition and MPrize Chamber Arts Competition. The Aizuri Quartet’s debut album, Blueprinting—which features the music of 5 American composers, all commissioned by the quartet—was nominated for a Grammy Award and named one of NPR’s top 10 classical albums of 2018. Their dedication to the art of the string quartet for 11 years was recognized by Chamber Music America, and in 2022 the quartet received the Cleveland Quartet Award. Currently, Ayane is a member of the duo Ayane & Paul with composer and cellist Paul Wiancko, with whom she collaborated on Norah Jones’ album “Pick Me Up Off the Floor.”


Clarinetist Anthony McGill is one of classical music’s most recognizable and brilliantly multifaceted figures. In addition to his dynamic international solo and chamber music career, McGill is principal clarinet of the New York Philharmonic—the first African-American principal player in the organization's history. Musical America named him the 2024 Instrumentalist of the Year. He is the recipient of the 2020 Avery Fisher Prize and was honored to take part in the 2009 inauguration of President Barack Obama, premiering a piece written for the occasion by John Williams and performing alongside violinist Itzhak Perlman, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, and pianist Gabriela Montero. He earned his first GRAMMY® nomination for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance for his album American Stories with the Pacifica Quartet (Cedille).


McGill appears regularly as a soloist with top orchestras, including the New York and Los Angeles Philharmonics, the Metropolitan Opera, and the Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, and Detroit Symphony Orchestras. As a chamber musician, McGill is a favorite collaborator of the Brentano, Daedalus, Guarneri, JACK, Miró, Pacifica, Shanghai, Takács, and Tokyo Quartets, as well as Emanuel Ax, Inon Barnatan, Gloria Chien, Yefim Bronfman, Gil Shaham, Midori, Mitsuko Uchida, and Lang Lang. He has toured with Musicians from Marlboro and regularly performs for the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society.. His festival appearances include Marlboro, Mainly Mozart, Ravinia, Skaneateles, Tanglewood, and the Music@Menlo, Santa Fe, and Seattle Chamber Music Festivals.



 


Post-Concert Conversation Guests

Photograph of the four members of the Balourdet Quartet, smiling, seated with their instruments.

Balourdet String Quartet

Photo: Stephen Barton

Balourdet String Quartet

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Organization

The Balourdet String Quartet was formed in 2018 at Rice University in Houston, Texas. In October of 2019, the quartet received the second prize at the Carl Nielsen International Chamber Music Competition in Copenhagen, Denmark. Its members have attended festivals including the Aspen Music Festival, Heifetz Institute, Kneisel Hall, Music ...

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Photograph of violinist Cho-Liang Lin playing his instrument.

Violinist, Cho-Liang Lin

Cho-Liang Lin, Violin

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Cho-Liang Lin was born in Taiwan. A neighbor’s violin studies convinced this 5-year old boy to do the same. At the age twelve, he moved to Sydney to further his studies with Robert Pikler, a student of Jenő Hubay. After playing for Itzhak Perlman in a master class, the 13-year old boy decided that he must study with Mr. Perlman’s...

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Photograph of composer, Jessie Montgomery, close up on face looking off into the distance., holding a violin

Composer, Jessie Montgomery

Jessie Montgomery, Composer

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Jessie Montgomery is an acclaimed composer, violinist, and educator. She is the recipient of the Leonard Bernstein Award from the ASCAP Foundation, and her works are performed frequently around the world by leading musicians and ensembles. Her music interweaves classical music with elements of vernacular music, improvisation, language, and social justice, placing her squarely as one of the most relevant interpreters of 21st-century American sound and experience.

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Schneider Concerts Presents the Balourdet Quartet | October 4, 2020, 2:00–4:00 PM (EDT) 

Program

A Note From The Balourdet String Quartet - When we constructed this program, we had no idea that it would be for a live-stream audience, yet our program feels especially relevant today. We strongly believe that these pieces create a cohesive narrative — from the exuberance, despair, and then humor of Beethoven op. 18 no. 1, to the nostalgic ecstasy of Jessie Montgomery’s “Strum”, to the powerful statement of Bartok’s Fourth Quartet. Each piece is an innovative step forward in quartet literature, expanding the range of expressive possibilities and techniques. The Beethoven builds on Haydn’s tradition and takes on a programmatic nature, offering a glimpse of the depth in which music can describe human suffering, loss, and then resounding joy. The Bartok, emblematic of a turn objectivity in the early 20th century, features a remarkable take on the structural possibilities of a string quartet. It also expands the sound worlds of our instruments with movements that are fully muted and pizzicato. Jessie Montgomery also calls upon the sound of using extensive pizzicato and evokes a certain nostalgic atmosphere, part of the work’s stylistic amalgamation taking us down a path towards the future of string quartet writing.

 

–Balourdet Quartet 

 

Ludwig van Beethoven - String Quartet No. 1 in F Major, Op. 18, No. 1 (1801)

 

At last, Beethoven felt ready to enter the weighty string quartet medium and offer his first set of quartets for publication in 1801. Interestingly, the first quartet he wrote chronologically is known to us as Op. 18 No. 3, in D Major, and this F Major Quartet, written second, was placed at the beginning of the set. Whether or not this was an intentional choice, the piece presents rather well what the rest of this set and the later works would end up featuring: a radical evolution of the quartet medium he inherited from the reins of Haydn and Mozart. This was all a product of Beethoven’s painstaking and probing working process unsurpassed by any composer before or since. 


The work begins with a fragment of a melody played in unison, followed by a mysterious silence. The fragment returns, more searchingly into another silence, only to be completed in a classical phrase structure. Immediately, there is another surprise as the phrase repeats as a forte outburst. The motive that comprises the opening phrase is a monorhythm which repeats in the movement literally hundreds of times, yet much like Beethoven’s future Fifth Symphony, its effect only enhances the energy and drama of the work. The first forte outburst serves as the precursor of many sudden dynamic contrasts, the motive acting as the thread stringing the music tightly together through all upheavals. 


An early draft of this quartet which Beethoven sent to his trusted friend, violinist and theologian Karl Amenda, is a unique vantage point into Beethoven’s working process and coming of age. While the overall thematic structure remains the same as in the final version, the dizzying amount of detail-oriented changes the piece underwent is shocking to compare. The most important revelation from the earlier version is Beethoven’s clear handwritten indications that the pathos-laden and dramatic slow movement is meant to correspond to the events of the tomb scene from Romeo and Juliette. With this discovery, one can only wonder if other abstract instrumental compositions of Beethoven, an ardent Shakespeare reader, were also meant to have programmatic ties. However, this is the only such example from his whole output that is explicitly stated, and Beethoven felt as though his music should speak for itself in the listener’s imagination. Even without knowing any programmatic connections, this movement would have been most striking for a listener of the era, especially with the melodramatic climaxes and painfully pronounced pauses. 


Following this Adagio, the last two movements serve largely as comic relief, with an especially virtuosic violin passage in the Scherzo’s trio catapulting the energy to a feverish height. The mood returns to playfulness throughout the satisfying finale movement, culminating in a jolly bon voyage tune combined with the main theme at the close.

- Balourdet String Quartet

 

Jessie Montgomery - "Strum" (2006: revised 2012)

 

"Strum" is the culminating result of several versions of a string quintet I wrote in 2006. It was originally written for the Providence String Quartet and guests of Community MusicWorks Players, then arranged for string quartet in 2008 with several small revisions. In 2012 the piece underwent its final revisions with a rewrite of both the introduction and the ending for the Catalyst Quartet in a performance celebrating the 15th annual Sphinx Competition.

 

Originally conceived for the formation of a cello quintet, the voicing is often spread wide over the ensemble, giving the music an expansive quality of sound. Within Strum I utilized texture motives, layers of rhythmic or harmonic ostinati that string together to form a bed of sound for melodies to weave in and out. The strumming pizzicato serves as a texture motive and the primary driving rhythmic underpinning of the piece. Drawing on American folk idioms and the spirit of dance and movement, the piece has a kind of narrative that begins with fleeting nostalgia and transforms into ecstatic celebration.”

 

— Jessie Montgomery

 

 Béla Bartók - String Quartet No. 4, Sz. 91 (1929)

 

The Fourth String Quartet of Béla Bartók is a landmark example of his compositional ethos, synonymous with all of the stylistic traits of his mature writing. It combines his sharp formal and technical mastery of pre-and post-twentieth century musical language and his devotion to folk music traditions of his native Hungary and beyond as one of the first modern ethnomusicologists. Above all else, his work reflects his prioritizing the myriad possible uses of symmetry in music. This quartet is groundbreaking in introducing various symmetries as the fabric of the main thematic material, the pitch centers of the five movements, and the function of each movement in the overall form of the piece. Bartok had a keen interest in arch form, congruous halves melded together around a central point, and the Fourth Quartet is the quintessential example of this form at all levels. All of these elements enhance a unique expressiveness, also apparent in the work’s scintillating energy and wide range of colors.

 
The first and the fifth movement pair as high energy movements presenting music as rhetoric — pitch motives going back and forth in discourse between voices, sometimes argumentatively.


They feature the same symmetrical motif throughout both movements, as well as an
Arabian-inspired tune heard gently in the first movement, which then roars in the last. Even within the intellectual discourse of the movements, a dance element is omnipresent. The second and fourth movements are hushed interludes which demonstrate music as a form of serious play, delicate yet full of inextinguishable energy. The second movement is a highly chromatic, eerie, and devilishly fast scherzo. The fourth is entirely plucked, with some of Bartók’s trademark snap-pizzicato and other extended techniques creating a unique sound world. At the center of the arch lies a serene and otherworldly slow movement that fits Bartók’s textural genre of “night music.” This third movement begins with the unfolding of a 6-note drone, featuring a delayed vibrato effect one can imagine as pulsating heat waves on a hot summer evening. The lengthy cello solo is said to emulate a Hungarian reed instrument called the Tárogató, and the subsequent solos of the other instruments vividly portray bird calls and even insects. The movement returns to tranquility at the end, with each instrument poetically dropping out in the reverse order they first entered.

 

- Balourdet String Quartet


The Balourdet Quartet wishes to thank you, the members of the audience, Jessie Montgomery, The New School, the Schneider Concert Series, and the New England Conservatory for allowing us to perform for you today. It is a pleasure to play these works and a very special occasion to perform “Strum” by the Mannes School of Music’s violin and composition faculty member, Jessie Montgomery.

Ludwig van Beethoven String Quartet No. 1 in F Major, Op. 18, No. 1 (1801)
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Jessie Montgomery "Strum" (2006: revised 2012)
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Béla Bartók String Quartet No. 4, Sz. 91 (1929)
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We are pleased to present this concert in partnership with

New England Conservatory

About New England Conservatory

New England Conservatory (NEC) is recognized internationally as a leader among music schools, educating and training musicians of all ages from around the world for over 150 years. NEC cultivates a diverse, dynamic community for students, providing them with performance opportunities and high-caliber training with internationally-esteemed artist-teachers and scholars. NEC’s alumni, faculty and students touch nearly every aspect of musical life in the region; NEC is a major engine of the vital activity that makes Boston a musical and cultural capital. With the recent appointment of Andrea Kalyn to serve as NEC’s 17th President, the Conservatory is poised to embark on a new chapter at the forefront of innovation in education and music.


About NEC's Professional Chamber Music Programs

NEC's Professional String Quartet Program and Professional Piano Trio Program provide intensive training and coaching for exceptional groups that show the talent and commitment necessary to pursue a concert career. Led by Paul Katz and Vivian Hornik Weilerstein, the programs come with full tuition scholarships and stipends for each student, weekly coachings and studio instruction, daily rehearsals, and training in all aspects of musicianship and career development. 

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5:00 PM — 6:00 PM

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Founded at The New School in 1957 as New School Concerts, this series was renamed the Schneider Concerts in 1993 in honor of founding artistic director Alexander “Sasha” Schneider, conductor, violinist, and member of the famed Budapest String Quartet. Initially founded with a very simple idea of access to all for an exceptionally high level of chamber music performance (ticket that cost only $1) that idea has expanded greatly in the past 60+ years, and now includes: affordable ticket prices, a focus on serving elderly New Yorkers, going beyond ADA compliance, supporting emerging chamber artists, opening our vision to include multidisciplinary approaches to chamber music, and continually reviewing our work through a lens of Equity, Inclusion, and Social Justice to ensure that we move beyond classical music's historical white focus, to be welcoming to and supportive of audiences and artists from all backgrounds. The series has been guided by Frank Salomon since 1959 and administered by Rohana Elias-Reyes since 2001. Guided by music advisors John Dalley, Pamela Frank, Jaime Laredo, Cho-Liang Lin, Anthony McGill, Kurt Muroki, Tara O’Connor, and Arnold Steinhardt, the series continues Mr. Schneider’s commitment to provide early career exposure to exceptional young artists and ensembles, and offer outstanding, accessible concerts at modest ticket prices to ensure access to all. Pianist Peter Serkin, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, and the Guarneri, Dover, and Calidore string quartets are among the many artists and ensembles to receive early career exposure on the series.

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New England Conservatory (NEC) is recognized internationally as a leader among music schools, educating and training musicians of all ages from around the world for over 150 years. NEC cultivates a diverse, dynamic community for students, providing them with performance opportunities and high-caliber training with internationally-esteemed artist-teachers and scholars. NEC’s alumni, faculty and students touch nearly every aspect of musical life in the region; NEC is a major engine of the vital activity that makes Boston a musical and cultural capital.


NEC's Professional String Quartet Program and Professional Piano Trio Program provide intensive training and coaching for exceptional groups that show the talent and commitment necessary to pursue a concert career. Led by Paul Katz and Vivian Hornik Weilerstein, the programs come with full tuition scholarships and stipends for each student, weekly coachings and studio instruction, daily rehearsals, and training in all aspects of musicianship and career development.

 

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Schneider Concerts Presents the Balourdet Quartet | October 4, 2020, 4:00–6:00 PM (EDT) 

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The Balourdet String Quartet

The Balourdet String Quartet was formed in 2018 at Rice University in Houston, Texas. The Quartet is recipient of the 2020 Fischoff Competition Gold Medal and second prize at the 2019 Carl Nielsen International Chamber Music Competition in Copenhagen, Denmark. The Quartet is currently participating in the New England Conservatory's Professional Chamber music Program. Its members have attended festivals including the Aspen Music Festival, Heifetz Institute, Kneisel Hall, Music Academy of the West, Sarasota Music Festival, and Taos School of Music. The varied musical backgrounds of all four members include education at Colburn Conservatory, Juilliard School, Manhattan School of Music, New England Conservatory, Northwestern University, and Rice University and chamber music coaching with members of the Borromeo, Brentano, Cavani, Cleveland, New Zealand, and Tokyo string quartets as well as Cho-Liang Lin. The Balourdet String Quartet recently attended the 2019 Aspen Music Festival Advanced String Quartet Studies program where it worked with the American, Escher, and Pacifica Quartets as well as James Dunham, Sylvia Rosenberg, and Donald Weilerstein. The Balourdet has also shared the stage with Cho-Liang Lin and performed Brahms Sextet No.1 with members of the Dover Quartet in summer 2019 at the Amelia Island Chamber Music Festival.

The Balourdet String Quartet

Sunday, October 4, 2020, 2:00 p.m. (EDT)


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Angela Bae and Justin DeFilippis, violin
Benjamin Zannoni, viola; Russell Houston, cello

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Ludwig van Beethoven String Quartet No. 1 in F Major, Op. 18, No. 1 (1801)


Jessie Montgomery "Strum" (2006: revised 2012)


Béla Bartók String Quartet No. 4, Sz. 91 (1929)



This program is presented in collaboration with the New England Conservatory

 

Ludwig van Beethoven String Quartet No. 1 in F Major, Op. 18, No. 1 (1801)

At last, Beethoven felt ready to enter the weighty string quartet medium and offer his first set of quartets for publication in 1801. Interestingly, the first quartet he wrote chronologically is known to us as Op. 18 No. 3, in D Major, and this F Major Quartet, written second, was placed at the beginning of the set. Whether or not this was an intentional choice, the piece presents rather well what the rest of this set and the later works would end up featuring: a radical evolution of the quartet medium he inherited from the reins of Haydn and Mozart. This was all a product of Beethoven’s painstaking and probing working process unsurpassed by any composer before or since.


The work begins with a fragment of a melody played in unison, followed by a mysterious silence. The fragment returns, more searchingly into another silence, only to be completed in a classical phrase structure. Immediately, there is another surprise as the phrase repeats as a forte outburst. The motive that comprises the opening phrase is a monorhythm which repeats in the movement literally hundreds of times, yet much like Beethoven’s future Fifth Symphony, its effect only enhances the energy and drama of the work. The first forte outburst serves as the precursor of many sudden dynamic contrasts, the motive acting as the thread stringing the music tightly together through all upheavals.


An early draft of this quartet which Beethoven sent to his trusted friend, violinist and theologian Karl Amenda, is a unique vantage point into Beethoven’s working process and coming of age. While the overall thematic structure remains the same as in the final version, the dizzying amount of detail-oriented changes the piece underwent is shocking to compare. The most important revelation from the earlier version is Beethoven’s clear handwritten indications that the pathos-laden and dramatic slow movement is meant to correspond to the events of the tomb scene from Romeo and Juliette. With this discovery, one can only wonder if other abstract instrumental compositions of Beethoven, an ardent Shakespeare reader, were also meant to have programmatic ties. However, this is the only such example from his whole output that is explicitly stated, and Beethoven felt as though his music should speak for itself in the listener’s imagination. Even without knowing any programmatic connections, this movement would have been most striking for a listener of the era, especially with the melodramatic climaxes and painfully pronounced pauses.


Following this Adagio, the last two movements serve largely as comic relief, with an especially virtuosic violin passage in the Scherzo’s trio catapulting the energy to a feverish height. The mood returns to playfulness throughout the satisfying finale movement, culminating in a jolly bon voyage tune combined with the main theme at the close.


Jessie Montgomery "Strum" (2006: revised 2012)

“Strum is the culminating result of several versions of a string quintet I wrote in 2006. It was originally written for the Providence String Quartet and guests of Community MusicWorks Players, then arranged for string quartet in 2008 with several small revisions. In 2012 the piece underwent its final revisions with a rewrite of both the introduction and the ending for the Catalyst Quartet in a performance celebrating the 15th annual Sphinx Competition.

Originally conceived for the formation of a cello quintet, the voicing is often spread wide over the ensemble, giving the music an expansive quality of sound. Within Strum I utilized texture motives, layers of rhythmic or harmonic ostinati that string together to form a bed of sound for melodies to weave in and out. The strumming pizzicato serves as a texture motive and the primary driving rhythmic underpinning of the piece. Drawing on American folk idioms and the spirit of dance and movement, the piece has a kind of narrative that begins with fleeting nostalgia and transforms into ecstatic celebration.”


— Jessie Montgomery


Béla Bartók String Quartet No. 4, Sz. 91 (1929)

The Fourth String Quartet of Béla Bartók is a landmark example of his compositional ethos, synonymous with all of the stylistic traits of his mature writing. It combines his sharp formal and technical mastery of pre-and post-twentieth century musical language and his devotion to folk music traditions of his native Hungary and beyond as one of the first modern ethnomusicologists. Above all else, his work reflects his prioritizing the myriad possible uses of symmetry in music. This quartet is groundbreaking in introducing various symmetries as the fabric of the main thematic material, the pitch centers of the five movements, and the function of each movement in the overall form of the piece. Bartok had a keen interest in arch form, congruous halves melded together around a central point, and the Fourth Quartet is the quintessential example of this form at all levels. All of these elements enhance a unique expressivity also apparent in the work’s scintillating energy and wide range of colors.


The first and the fifth movement pair as high energy movements presenting music as rhetoric — pitch motives going back and forth in discourse between voices, sometimes argumentatively.
They feature the same symmetrical motif throughout both movements, as well as an
Arabian-inspired tune heard gently in the first movement and roaringly in the last. Even within the intellectual discourse of the movements, a dance element is omnipresent. The second and fourth movements are hushed interludes which demonstrate music as a form of serious play, delicate yet full of inextinguishable energy. The second movement is a highly chromatic, eerie, and devilishly fast scherzo. The fourth is entirely plucked, with some of Bartók’s trademark snap-pizzicato and other extended techniques creating a unique sound world. At the center of the arch lies a serene and otherworldly slow movement that fits Bartók’s textural genre of “night music.” This third movement begins with the unfolding of a 6-note drone, featuring a delayed vibrato effect one can imagine as pulsating heat waves on a hot summer evening. The lengthy cello solo is said to emulate a Hungarian reed instrument called the Tárogató, and the subsequent solos of the other instruments vividly portray bird calls and even insects. The movement returns to tranquility at the end, with each instrument poetically dropping out in the reverse order they first entered.


Acknowledgments

Thank you to our audience, Jessie Montgomery, The New School, the Schneider Concert Series, and the New England Conservatory for allowing us to perform for you today. It is a pleasure to play these works and a very special occasion to perform “Strum” by the Mannes School of Music’s newest violin and composition faculty member, Jessie Montgomery.


— Notes by the Balourdet String Quartet, except where otherwise noted.

Cho-Liang Lin

Cho-Liang Lin was born in Taiwan. A neighbor’s violin studies convinced this 5-year old boy to do the same. At the age twelve, he moved to Sydney to further his studies with Robert Pikler, a student of Jenő Hubay. After playing for Itzhak Perlman in a master class, the 13-year old boy decided that he must study with Mr. Perlman’s teacher, Dorothy DeLay. At the age fifteen, Lin traveled alone to New York and auditioned for the Juilliard School and spent the next six years working with Ms DeLay.


A concert career was launched in 1980 with Lin’s debut playing the Mendelssohn Concerto with the New York Philharmonic and Zubin Mehta . He has since performed as soloist with virtually every major orchestra in the world. His busy schedule on stage around the world continues to this day. However, his wide ranging interests have led him to diverse endeavors. At the age of 31, his alma mater, Juilliard School, invited Lin to become faculty. In 2006, he was appointed professor at Rice University. He is currently music director of La Jolla SummerFest and the Hong Kong International Chamber Music Festival. Ever so keen about education, he was music director of the Taiwan National Symphony music camp and youth orchestra for four years.


In his various professional capacities, Cho-Liang Lin has championed composers of our time. His efforts to commission new works have led a diverse field of composers to write for him. The list includes John Harbison, Christopher Rouse, Tan Dun, John Williams, Steven Stucky, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Bright Sheng, Paul Schoenfield, Lalo Schifrin, Joan Tower and many more. Recently, he was soloist with the New York Philharmonic, Detroit Symphony, Munich Philharmonic, Toronto Symphony, Cincinnati Symphony, Nashville Symphony and Royal Philharmonic. He is a member of the New School Concerts music advisory committee.


Lin performs on the 1715 Stradivari named “Titian” or a 2000 Samuel Zygmuntowicz. His many concerto, recital and chamber music recordings on Sony Classical, Decca, BIS, Delos and Ondine can be heard on Spotify or Naxos.com. His albums have won Gramophone Record Of The Year, Grammy nominations and Penguin Guide Rosettes.

Jessie Montgomery, Violinist & Composer

 Her profoundly felt works have been described as “turbulent, wildly colorful and exploding with life” (The Washington Post).

 

Her growing body of work includes solo, chamber, vocal, ballet, and orchestral works. Some recent highlights include Shift, Change, Turn… (2019) commissioned by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Passage (2019) a ballet commissioned by Dance Theatre of Harlem, Coincident Dances (2018) for the Chicago Sinfonietta, and Caught by the Wind (2016) for the Albany Symphony and the American Music Festival.

 
The New York Philharmonic has selected Montgomery as one of the featured composers for their Project 19, which marks the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, granting equal voting rights in the United States to women. Other forthcoming works include a cadenza for the Brahms Violin Concerto, to be premiered by Hilary Hahn; a cello concerto for Thomas Mesa jointly commissioned by Carnegie Hall, New World Symphony, and The Sphinx Organization; and a new orchestral work for the National Symphony.

 

A founding member of PUBLIQuartet and recent member of the Catalyst Quartet, she continues to maintain an active performance career as a violinist appearing regularly with her improvising duo Big dog little dog with bassist Eleonore Oppenheim.

 

Montgomery’s teachers and mentors include Sally Thomas, Ann Setzer, Alice Kanack, Joan Tower, Derek Bermel, Mark Suozzo, Ira Newborn, and Laura Kaminsky. She holds degrees from the Juilliard School and New York University and is currently a Graduate Fellow in Music Composition at Princeton University. Montgomery is on both the composition and violin faculty at Mannes. 

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