The opening work, a Duo for Violin and Piano composed by Roger Sessions in 1942, was rendered as four movements of rather different color. In the first, a melancholy, long-breathed violin line slowly arches over a gentle piano moto perpetuo, becoming more active in a middle section and then returning to calm. Here and in the lovely third movement, Kaplan and Weiss demonstrated that dissonance can be so pretty if played lyrically. Even jagged melodies, like those in the expressionistic second movement and the opening scherzo of the fourth (a dancelike flitting back and forth) can be treated as phrases in the same way you would approach Mozart (well, not exactly the same way). Throughout the Sessions piece, I admired the sound Kaplan got from his violin and was not surprised to learn later that he plays the Marquis Stradivarius (dated 1685), an early instrument from the Cremonese master but still of exquisite craftsmanship.
By contrast to Kaplan's extroverted playing, Weiss seemed reserved, choking off her sound with a lot of soft pedal and a touch that sometimes seemed not fully in the keys, making for sensitive playing that rarely challenged the violin's supremacy. The second work, Feigin's Veränderungen (Transformations, 1995) was suited to this approach, opening with whispery, ethereal sounds, including gentle stroking of the strings inside the piano cabinet. The composer, a student of Sessions, seemed to transform himself, too, with music that morphed temporarily into Debussy; there were even hints of Paganini in a virtuosic passage for violin. With some exciting, visceral playing in the fortissimo middle section, the piece closed with a sudden shift toward predominantly triadic harmony.
Joan Reinthaler, Violinist Mark Kaplan (Washington Post, February 20) |
The second concert of the National Gallery's American Music Festival will feature pianist Alan Feinberg (February 25, 6:30 pm), playing music by Babbitt, Cage, Feldman, Helps, Ives, and Nancarrow. It will also take place in the East Building Auditorium.
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