Concert Reviews

Concert Reviews

Streichquartett überzeugt in Kronach mit delikater Tongebung

Eine ausgesprochen reife Leistung zeigte das junge “Lazarus Quartett” bei seinem Konzert mit Haydn, Bartok und Beethoven im Kronacher Kreiskulturraum.
Das "Lazarus Quartett" begeisterte mit seiner Spielweise im Rahmen des VHS-Musikrings in Kronach. Foto: Klaus Klaschka
Das “Lazarus Quartett” begeisterte mit seiner Spielweise im Rahmen des VHS-Musikrings in Kronach. Foto: Klaus Klaschka

Nahtloses Zusammenspiel und delikate Tongebung ließ das “Lazarus Streichquartett” in seinem Konzert des VHS-Musikrings am Samstagabend im Kreiskulturraum nicht nur hören, sondern es faszinierte damit. Das junge Ensemble ist nicht nur instrumentaltechnisch über alle Zweifel erhaben.

Es zeichnet sich insbesondere durch fein ziselierte Homogenität aus. Das bei den Klassikern Haydn und Beethoven, ganz intensiv aber bei Bartoks zweitem Streichquartett. Diesem nahmen die vier Musiker jedwede Sprödigkeit, die in den Interpretionen anderer Quartett-Ensembles oftmals eher unangenehm wirkt.

Aus vier Ländern und von drei Kontinenten stammen Mayumi Kanagawa (USA/Japan) und Jos Jonker (Niederlande/beide Violine), Albin Uusijärvi (Schweden/Viola) sowie Alice Gott (Neuseeland/Violoncello). Sie fanden vor zwölf Jahren in Neuseeland zusammen und residieren seit 2011 als Quartett in Berlin.

Kochen, Spielen, Musizieren

Zusätzlich zu den Probephasen und Konzerten reisen die vier oft nach Holland und Schweden; während dieser Wochen spielen sie nicht nur Quartett, sondern auch klassische Brettspiele. Inspiration kommt auch von gemeinsamem Kochen und von Spaziergängen in der Natur. Vielleicht liegt in solchen außermusikalischen Begegnungen ja das Geheimnis der musikalischen Homogenität der vier erst 25- bis 30-jährigen Streicher.

Das erste Stück des Konzerts, Joseph Haydns Quartett op. 76 Nr. 5, hatte ein Graf Erdödi für 100 Dukaten beim Komponisten bestellt mit der Auflage, dass es erst nach zwei Jahren gedruckt werden darf. Obwohl Auftragswerk, hat Haydn hierfür aber keine Standardnummer produziert, die einer etablierten musikalischen Form folgt.

Luftig und locker

Er hat experimentiert und mehr oder minder leichte Musik um ein Largo geschrieben, das dem gesamten Quartett trotz Eingangstonart Fis-Dur den Namen “Friedhofsquartett” bescherte. Dementsprechend gestaltete das “Lazarus Quartett” auch seine Interpretation luftig und locker – besonders auffallend im Cello, das Alice Gott generell tänzerisch, fast ein wenig im italienischen Stil spielt.

Der Sprung zum zweiten Stück des Abends war groß aber kein Bruch, sondern das andere Ende einer musikalischen Entwicklung, die in den klaren Formen der Wiener Klassik Haydns, Mozarts und Beethovens begann, in der romantischen Phase in schwelgerischen Überschwang geriet und schließlich mit dem ersten Weltkrieg und dem gesellschaftlichen Umbruch neue Wege fand.

Bartoks zweites Streichquartett ist an der Schwelle zu dieser neuen Zeit. Es verwendet kürzere Motive, orientiert sich einerseits an der Volksmusik und den Rhythmen Osteuropas, führt das musikalische “Ausgangsmaterial” aber in “klassischer Manier” durch. Diese damals unerhörte Musik spielte das “Lazarus Quartett” adäquat unerhört, unbeschreiblich emotional und ließ eine Ahnung vom Fin de Siecle vor inzwischen gut 100 Jahren akustisch wieder aufleben.

Krönender Abschluss

Beethovens 6. Streichquartett B-Dur aus op.18 nach der Pause war für den Teil des Publikums, das gewohntere Töne bevorzugt, wohl der krönende Abschluss. Wie aus einem Guss geriet der Kopfsatz des halbstündigen Stückes mit dem kecken Dreiklangsmotiv. Gesanglich großbögig gestaltet erklang das Adagio, schwungvoll das synkopierte Scherzo, bis sich nach ausgedehnter langsamer Einleitung im Schlusssatz heitere Stimmung ausbreitete, die in eine atemberaubende Coda mündete.

Source: infranken.de

Artikel von: Klaus Klaschka, Veröffentlicht von: Fränkischer Tag

Lazarus String Quartet begeistert in Coburg mit beseeltem Musizieren

Wie das Lazarus String Quartet die gelbe Reihe der Coburger Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde im Kongresshaus fulminant eröffnete.
Ein beeindruckendes Coburg-Debüt gelang dem jungen Lazarus String Quartet beim Auftritt im Kongresshaus Rosengarten.Foto: Jochen Berger
Ein beeindruckendes Coburg-Debüt gelang dem jungen Lazarus String Quartet beim Auftritt im Kongresshaus Rosengarten.
Foto: Jochen Berger
Aus vier Ländern und drei Kontinenten stammen die vier jungen Mitglieder des Lazarus String Quartet mit Mayumi Kanagawa (USA/Japan), Violine, Jos Jonker (Niederlande), Violine, Albin Uusijärvi (Schweden), Viola und Alice Gott (Neuseeland), Violoncello, die sich vor 12 Jahren zusammen fanden, um zu musizieren und nunmehr bereits weltweit als “Rising Stars” große Erfolge feiern durften. Seit 2011 residiert das Ensemble in Berlin. In ihrem Coburger Programm traf Neoklassik auf Wiener Klassik – eine interessante Gegenüberstellung, die mit Gehörumstellung verbunden war.

Es begann mit dem Streichquartett Es-Dur KV 428 von Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, das er neben anderen dem “Vater” dieser Gattung, Joseph Haydn, widmete. Das Lazarus String Quartet zeigte sogleich seine gehobene Klasse bezüglich tonlicher Delikatesse, nahtlosem Zusammenspiel, klanglicher Balance und ausdrucksvoller Gestaltung.

Technisch souverän musiziert

Beschwingt und beseelt zugleich wurde der Kopfsatz musiziert, andächtig und expressiv das Andante con moto, musikantisch das akzentreiche Menuetto und virtuos das launige, ausgelassene Finale.

Über 100 Jahre ist das 2. Streichquartett von Béla Bartók schon alt, hat aber nichts von seiner harmonischen Kühnheit und kompositorischer Meisterschaft verloren.

Große Steigerungen, dramatische Stellen mit geballten Dissonanzen, aber auch ruhige lyrische Passagen prägen den ersten Satz, unbändige Vitalität mit Glissando-Effekten das scherzoartige Allegro molto capriccioso, bevor – sehr ungewöhnlich – ein Lento in verhaltenem Sordinoklang das interessante Werk beschließt. Vom ersten bis zum letzten Ton fesselnd, technisch souverän und stilsicher bewältigten die Künstler ihre anspruchsvolle Aufgabe und fügten dem laufenden Bartók-Zyklus einen weiteren Stein zu.

Krönender Abschluss

Nach der Pause bildete das 6. Streichquartett B-Dur aus op.18 von Ludwig van Beethoven den krönenden Abschluss. Wie aus einem Guss geriet der Kopfsatz mit dem kecken Dreiklangsmotiv. Gesanglich großbögig gestaltet erklang das Adagio, schwungvoll das synkopierte Scherzo, bis sich nach ausgedehnter langsamer Einleitung im Schlusssatz heitere Stimmung ausbreitete, die in eine atemberaubende Coda mündete.

Viel Beifall für das aufstrebende junge Lazarus String Quartet, das sich mit der Zugabe “Träumerei” aus Schumanns “Kinderszenen” verabschiedete.

Source: infranken.de

Artikel von: Gerhard Deutschman, Veröffentlicht von: Coburger Tageblatt

Wellington Chamber Music
Lazarus String Quartet (Mayumi Kanagawa and Jos Jonker – violins; Albin Uusijärvi – viola; Alice Gott – cello)

Mozart: Quartet No 16 in E flat, K 428
Bartók: Quartet No 2 in A minor
Beethoven: Quartet in B flat, Op 18 no 6

St Andrew’s on The Terrace

Sunday 1 September 2019, 3 pm

Here was an interesting ensemble that formed in 2007 when four University of Canterbury students got together, winning a ROSL Arts/Pettman Scholarship in 2010 which took them to study at the Hochschule für Musik in Hanover. That led to concerts that have included St Martin-in-the-Fields in London, the Salle Gaveau in Paris, Poland and elsewhere, and at music festivals (the Edinburgh Fringe and Heidelberg Spring festivals).

The original members, all Canterbury graduates, were: Emma Yoon and Julianne Song (violins), Lindsay McLay (viola), Alice Gott (cello).

This New Zealand tour was organised by the one remaining New Zealand member, Alice Gott, and has taken them to eleven towns in New Zealand, from the famous Mussel Inn in Golden Bay, Wanaka, Otago University, Waiheke island, All Saints Church in Howick, to Gisborne and finally Wellington.

Their 2013 tour through New Zealand included a Wellington concert, also promoted by Wellington Chamber Music, that was reviewed on this website on 22 September 2013.

Mozart in E flat
This concert began with one of the six quartets that Mozart dedicated to Haydn, having been inspired by Haydn’s Op 33 set (though the E flat sonata is said to reflect Haydn’s Op 20 set). It opens with a few unison octaves played with warmth and simplicity that doesn’t seem to suggest any particular mood or clear musical character; the essence of the piece seems to be in the detailed and elaborate handling of the themes. The second movement presents a more serious tone and one is very aware of the extremely careful writing and treatment of the evolving pattern of Mozart’s material. One feels that the music is conspicuously important to the composer, and one is constantly aware of the painstaking care Mozart is taking with its every turn. These players understood the task they faced – not particularly difficult technically, but certainly spiritually and in the characterisation of the music. The mere fact of its great length, around 15 minutes, attests to that.

The Menuetto is superficially more straightforward; the players only need to find a course through a movement that normally offers a more light-hearted moment, but here displays a notably thoughtful character; they did that. Nor is the last movement, though Allegro vivace and fairly lively rhythmically, unduly buoyant and carefree; it remains a serious composition. The players’ close attention to its dynamic shifts and emotional variety kept it very much alive and filled with interest.

Bartók’s No 2
Bartók’s quartets are widely regarded as the most important since those of Beethoven, charting a course that’s radically new as well as musically rich. No 2 was written during the First World War and it shows, for the composer was deeply distressed by the privations Hungary was subjected to. It can fairly be regarded as not strongly unified as each movement presents such a distinct character. It opens in a secretive way, hinting at atonality, an impression derived mainly from its unorthodox melodic shape. I’m sure genuine tonal roots can be demonstrated.

The players had clearly absorbed Bartók’s aesthetic pretty thoroughly, reaching a level at which their playing created a sense of naturalness and inevitability in the music, especially in the meditative passages, and the underlying emotion was often quite apparent. I don’t claim to find Bartók’s music particularly congenial or easy to find delight in, but here, and especially in the second movement, Allegro molto capriccioso, the energy and the melodies, alien as they were, registered. The music was clearly expressing excitement in its own way and even when that’s in a ‘foreign language’, a receptive mood and open ears can make it interesting, even arresting. It transcended the small matter of being in a strange, unfamiliar idiom; a feeling that should surely be a thing of the past.

The third movement was rather harder to reach: remote, secretive, their playing was extremely careful, sensitive, and they drew out alien emotions so that the dissonances and unfamiliar sounds were never disagreeable. Bartók himself confessed to finding a formal template ‘difficult to define’. It goes without saying that the performers’ challenges are formidable, yet they played in a lively and persuasive way, even suggesting that they gained considerable emotional comfort in its performance.*

Beethoven’s Op 18 No 6
After the Interval, it was Beethoven’s Op 18 No 6. If my attention in the first two works seems to have been dominated by the ensemble playing rather than by individual characteristics, they were more conspicuous here. The cello on the one hand, warm and rhythmic, and the violin, quite penetrating it its prominence, particularly, leading the way in the second movement. That is particularly charming, with a memorable step-wise first theme, and though its beauty creates a hope for repeats and simply for more, it’s far shorter than the equivalent movement in the Mozart quartet. The final notes were singularly touching.

The third movement, Scherzo: Allegro, is a study in quick dynamic contrasts and very light, brisk gestures. Short as it is, there’s space for a quickly despatched trio section, all of which the quartet handled with a feeling of genuine authenticity. It’s the last movement that departs significantly from the usual shape of a string quartet. The first section is entitled Malinconia – Adagio, and the composer wrote that it must be treated with the utmost delicacy; the players obeyed scrupulously: and it emerged secretive and arresting. But even at its now Allegro pace, there remained a lightness or tentativeness, at nothing much more than mezzo-forte dynamic level. There’s a momentary return to the melancholy theme before the final dash.

The programme was structured most thoughtfully: stimulating, mainstream pieces that had very distinctly unusual features, and a major piece of relative modernity, if it’s still possible to employ that word more than a century after its composition.

* Addendum

A Bartók perspective
As an uncalled for footnote to the comments on Bartók, I came across a particularly interesting 2007 lecture on the second quartet by Professor Roger Parker of Gresham College, London, that ended with this comforting perspective on Bartók’s six quartets.

Famously, these quartets explore, and make demands on, their four instrumentalists in ways unknown (indeed, unimaginable) in previous times. You’ll hear plenty of that in a moment or two. It is interesting, though, that while in the 1950s and 1960s the Bartók quartets were regarded as among the most austere and demanding imaginable, these days they have begun to seem more mainstream and approachable. Of course, this was always supposed to happen to modernist music: when I was a music student forty years ago, we were endlessly assured that contemporary music which seemed to us incomprehensible would, with repeated listening and industrial-strength doses of aural training, sound as limpid and predictable as Eine kleine Nachtmusik. Well, I’m here to tell you that we tried, even tried hard, and it didn’t. A work like Webern’s Op. 27 sounds just as strange now as it did forty or, for that matter, eighty years ago, and my guess is that it will sound strange forever. But Bartók, even the relatively austere Bartók of the string quartets, is different. Younger players such as those we will hear today come to the music without preconceptions, without thinking that it must be impenetrable and harsh; and as a result they make more sense of it, or at least a different kind of sense: while not ignoring its challenges, and while remaining respectful of its demands, they connect it more easily to its nineteenth-century roots, and so (I think) help us understand it more clearly.

Source: Middle C

By , 01/09/2019

What:             Recital of works by Mozart, Bartok, and Beethoven

Who:               The Lazarus String Quartet           

When: Tuesday 27 August St. Andrew’s Church, Cambridge.            

Where:           St. Andrew’s Church, Cambridge.           

Performed by:           Mayumi Kanagawa and Jos Jonker, violins, Albin Uusijarvi, viola,  Alice Gott, cello       

 

Reviewer:      Sam Edwards

 

Here is a fact for nothing. Alfred Schnittke, outre Russian/German composer, suffered a major stroke in later life, was declared clinically dead several times, but recovered and continued to compose. When tonight’s quartet was being introduced by cellist Gott, she reminded us that it was much better for music that he continued to compose rather than decompose. It is a tribute to Schnittke, whose music they play, although not tonight,  that they call themsleves the Lazarus String Quartet.The wit was received with a rare pleasure, although in the end, even greater pleasure, and it was profound, came from their music. The venerable wooden container known as St Andrew’s Church was saturated with sound in a manner  one rarely experiences with strings. The resonance so filled the space we felt that we were sitting among the players, gorging on an exquisite musical feast. The Bartok – his  String Quartet No 2 in A minor, Op. 17 – became even more intense and disturbing. The quartet exracted every dissonant nuance, every dramatic nightmare, all the emotional extremes which connected players and listeners  in an unforgettable sharing of  emotions. In a moment of perfect programming,  programming which enhanced the performance of  each work by setting it against inescapable difference, the bookending beauties of the Beethoven and Mozart were revealed with even greater clarity . Even so, in this audience accessible display of creative virtuosity there were still further highlights to cherish, such as those moments where the cello came out of an organically harmonious group delivery to bring sonorous riches which made the Gott sound unique. These were the liveliest of strings, full of an energy which  which illuminated even the gentlest ppp – and in the fourth, and final, required by Beethoven to be played “delicately”, we were treated to a climactic finale which defined masterwork performance.  

Source: Waikato Times

Berlin-based string quartet masters contrasting works

The lunchtime recital at Marama Hall yesterday featured a Berlin-based international string quartet – the Lazarus Quartet, established in 2007 at Canterbury University.

The quartet now comprises members from different countries: Mayumi Kanagawa (United States/Japan) violin, Jos Jonker (Netherlands) violin, Albin Uusijarvi (Sweden) viola, and founding member Alice Gott (alumni of Canterbury University) cello.

Gott was born in Dunedin in 1990 and began playing cello at the age of 5.

The good-sized audience was treated to two contrasting string chamber works, and from the opening lines of Mozart’s String Quartet No16 in E-flat major it was apparent this would be a top-shelf performance. Allegro non troppo immediately displayed strong warm tones and immaculate co-ordination, plus virtuosity from all in thematic and arpeggioic exposure.

Andante con moto delivered tight harmonic blends, subtle chromaticism and mild dissonance, then the minuetto and trio revealed a chirpy contrast in character, highlighted by passages of mezzo staccato ”togetherness”.

The final rondo form, allegro vivace, was accorded a constant vivace emphasis.

The second work, String Quartet No 2 in A minor (1917), by Bela Bartok, was a total contrast. Written by a Hungarian during the war years, this was a display of relentless dissonance – tense unsettling music.

The long silence before applause at the end showed the audience were completely drawn in to the emotive interpretation of this three-movement work, which Bartok described as ”a peaceful life – joy – suffering”.

It is agitated, fragmented and massively expressive, and the quartet dealt with motifs of peasant rhythms and melody throughout the first two movements, expressing feelings of hope, then melancholy, until the final dark and desolate lento in which textures, pizzicati and extreme dynamics spelt out the desperation and suffering of war. This was Bartok at its absolute best!

-By Elizabeth Bouman

Source: odt.co.nz

Lazarus String Quartet – Mayumi Kanagawa & Jos Jonker (violin), Albin Uusijärvi (viola) and Alice Gott (‘cello). 19 August, Great Hall. 

The Lazarus String Quartet comprises four outstanding young musicians and their collective playing was absolutely breathtaking, full of energy and ideas. With wonderful communication skills one often felt they were thinking and playing as one, pulling off some extremely subtle playing that could not have been judged any finer.

The programme was sound, with Mozart’s String Quartet no.16K428 opening and Bartόk’s String Quartet no.2op.17 concluding, with a jaunty Scandinavian folk tune arranged into a kind of reel as an encore. It showed a darker side of Mozart and a lighter side of Bartόk, the two musical styles giving the ensemble free range to explore a wide variety of textures which they did with relish.

Right from the opening angular unison phrase, the Mozart had an overriding pensive mood and the quartet really brought that out. What also became quickly apparent was the confidence with which they filled the space of the Great Hall with their sound. In the Menuetto and TrioI liked the way the inner parts of the second violin and viola worked together, first violinist Mayumi Kanagawa doing an excellent job of keeping the momentum going, providing strong leadership as she did throughout the concert. The Trio was one of the prime examples of delicate articulation I alluded to earlier on. The Allegro vivacepacked a punch and set an uncompromising tempo which threw the darker episodes into sharper relief – this was very nicely judged.

The Bartόk may not have been to everyone’s taste, perhaps being quite heavy fare for a lunchtime concert, but I loved it. In the opening Moderato there was a searching quality and the Quartet revelled in the dissonances. This was powerful, bold playing which could flick instantly into the most refined of gestures. The three-note motif which passed through the ensemble was handled well and the cohesion and emphasis they developed when it became more dominant was superb. Similarly, there was plenty of rhythmic bite in the Allegro Molto Capriccioso and the passage where they were all muted producing rapid string crossing was extraordinary. It seems to me the players had really done their homework and listened to some of those original sounds the composer had drawn on for his inspiration. Unusually, the piece ends with a sustained slow movement, the deepest of the movements, and the players produced expansive and expressive playing which again had that restless quality and a big presence.

This was a memorable performance by a very strong quartet and I look forward to their speedy return to New Zealand.

Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd.

Source: University of Canterbury

 

© Lazarus String Quartet 2017