The Transylvanian village where Bartók was born, Nagyszentmiklós, was named for St. Nicholas. In 1881, the town belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary, but because of the conflict between Hungary and Romania after the end of World War I, it became part of Romania (it is now known as Sânnicolau Mare). The overlap of cultures in that part of the world meant that Bartók grew up with a sense of connection to both Hungarian and Romanian folk music. He composed the Romanian Folk Dances in 1915, a set of simple piano arrangements of Romanian folk tunes he recorded, transcribing them in equally simple orchestral versions a couple years later. Eschenbach gave the first of these dances, a stick dance, a heavy, plodding rhythm, and each miniature that followed had its own feel, featuring nuanced solos from clarinet, piccolo (in imitation of the shepherd flute the composer may have first these tunes on), and concertmaster Nurit Bar-Josef, whose sometimes extravagant vibrato is quite suited to this kind of music.
In a not unrelated story Bartók's friend Zoltán Kodály grew up in the town of Galánta, which also belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary in the 1890s. After World War I, it became part of the newly created Czechoslovakia, returning to Hungary briefly during World War II, and since 1945 it remains part of what is now Slovakia. Kodály created his orchestral piece Dances of Galánta as a tribute to the music of the town's gypsy band, led by the violinist Mihók. The piece was a favorite of the NSO's former principal conductor Iván Fischer, who conducted it several times in the last few years, including in 2009. Principal clarinetist Loren Kitt had another admirable solo turn here, with a flexible gypsy-style sense of rallentando and accelerando, earning him an earnest round of applause from his colleagues. For a piece that has been on the NSO docket so much recently, the fast pieces did not always sit easily, especially at the frenetic tempos Eschenbach chose. The downside of the alternate Friday program may have been shaving available rehearsal time a little too close for comfort.
Cecelia Porter, National Symphony performs works of Bartok, Kodaly, Liszt and Brahms (Washington Post, March 12) |
The dance "B-side" of next week's NSO performance of Fidelio is a program of Viennese favorites by the composers of the Strauss family (March 16, 1:30 pm).
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