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tokyo string quartet Morse Recital Hall • Tuesday, October 2, 2012 at 8 pm Music of Webern, Mozart, and Mendelssohn Robert Blocker, Dean Oneppo Chamber Music Series · David Shifrin, Artistic Director

Tokyo String Quartet

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The Tokyo String Quartet, which has been in residence at Yale since 1976, celebrates its last season together before retiring from the international concert stage. Webern: Five Pieces; Mozart: Quintet in C major, with Ettore Causa, viola; Mendelssohn: Octet for Strings, with the Jasper String Quartet.

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Page 1: Tokyo String Quartet

tokyo string quartet

Morse Recital Hall • Tuesday, October 2, 2012 at 8 pmMusic of Webern, Mozart, and Mendelssohn

Robert Blocker, Dean

Oneppo Chamber Music Series · David Shifrin, Artistic Director

Page 2: Tokyo String Quartet

tokyo string quartet

Martin Beaver, violin · Kikuei Ikeda, violinKazuhide Isomura, viola · Clive Greensmith, cello

Morse Recital Hall in Sprague Memorial Hall october 2, 2012 tuesday · 8:00 pm

Anton Webern1883–1945

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart1756 —1791

Felix Mendelssohn1809—1847

Five Pieces for String Quartet, Op. 5Heftig bewegtSehr langsamSehr lebhaftSehr langsamIn zarter bewegung

String Quintet No. 3 in C major, K. 515AllegroMenuetto: AllegrettoAndanteAllegro

Ettore Causa, viola

intermission

Octet for Strings, Op. 20 Allegro moderato ma con fuocoAndanteScherzoPresto

jasper string quartetJ Freivogel, violinSae Chonabayashi, violinSam Quintal, violaRachel Henderson Freivogel, cello

After 43 seasons, the Tokyo String Quartet has announced that 2012-2013 will be their last. Regarded as one of the supreme chamber ensembles of the world, the Tokyo Quartet—Martin Beaver and Kikuei Ikeda (violins), Kazuhide Isomura (viola), and Clive Greensmith (cello)—has collaborated with a remarkable array of artists and composers, built a comprehensive catalogue of critically acclaimed recordings, and established a distinguished teaching record. Performing over a hundred concerts worldwide each season, the quartet has a devoted inter- national following across the globe.

Officially formed in 1969 at the Juilliard School of Music, the quartet traces its origins to the Toho School of Music in Tokyo, where the founding members were profoundly influenced by Professor Hideo Saito. Soon after its formation, the quartet won First Prize at the Coleman Competition, the Munich Competition, and the Young Concert Artists International Auditions. An exclusive

contract with Deutsche Grammophon firmly established it as one of the world’s leading quartets, and it has since released more than 40 landmark recordings. The ensemble now records on the Harmonia Mundi label.

The members of the Tokyo String Quartet have served on the faculty of the Yale School of Music as quartet-in-residence since 1976. Deeply committed to coaching young string quartets, they conduct master classes in North America, Europe, and Asia.

The ensemble performs on the “Paganini Quartet,” a group of renowned Stradivarius instruments named for legendary virtuoso Niccolò Paganini, who acquired and played them during the nineteenth century. The instruments have been on loan to the ensemble from the Nippon Music Foundation since 1995, when they were purchased from the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

About the Artists

As a courtesy to the performers and audience, turn off cell phones and pagers. Please do

not leave the hall during selections. Photography or recording of any kind is prohibited.

The Tokyo String Quartet is managed by Opus 3 Artists.

Page 3: Tokyo String Quartet

Italian-born violist Ettore Causa was awarded both the P. Schidlof Prize and the J. Barbirolli Prize for the most beautiful sound at the prestigious Lionel Tertis International Viola Competition in England in 2000. He has since made solo and recital appearances in many of the major venues around the world, including Victoria Hall (Geneva), Zurich Tonhalle, Madrid National Auditorium, Barcelona Auditorium, Salle Cortot (Paris), Teatro Colón (Buenos Aires), Tokyo Symphony Hall, Osaka Symphony Hall, and MSM Auditorium (New York).

In addition, he has performed at numerous international festivals such as the Menuhin Festival (Gstaad), Festival de Estoril (Portugal), Salzburg Festival, Festival del Pontino (Italy), Tivoli Festival (Copenhagen), Festival of Perth (Australia), Prussia Cove (England), Savonlinna (Finland), Norfolk (Connecticut), and Lanaudière (Canada).

A devoted chamber musician, Mr. Causa was a member of the Aria Quartet from 2004 to 2009 and currently plays in the Poseidon Quartet. He has frequently been invited to prestigious chamber music festivals, where he has performed with internationally renowned musicians such as the Tokyo String Quartet, Pascal Rogé, Boris Berman, Thomas Adès, Natalie Clein, Ana Chumachenco, Alberto and Antonio Lysy, Thomas Demenga, Anthony Marwood, Ulf Wallin, William Bennett, and others.

Mr. Causa studied at the International Menuhin Music Academy with Alberto Lysy, Sir Yehudi Menuhin, and Johannes Eskar, and later at the Manhattan School of Music with Michael Tree. Upon completing his studies, he was appointed first solo viola of the Carl Nielsen Philharmonic in Odense (Denmark) as well as Leader of the Copenhagen Chamber Soloists. His first recording, featuring transcriptions of romantic music for viola and piano, was released in 2006 on the Claves record label. It garnered overwhelming success and was crowned with the 5 Diapasons. His newest recording of the Brahms viola sonatas has been highly praised by critics worldwide.

Mr. Causa taught both viola and chamber music for many years at the International Menuhin Music Academy, and joined the the Yale School of Music faculty in September 2009. He performs on a viola made for him by Frédéric Chaudière in 2003.

About the Artists

Winner of the 2012 Cleveland Quartet Award, the Jasper String Quartet has been hailed as “sonically delightful and expressively compelling” (The Strad) and “powerful” (New York Times). Based in New Haven, Connecticut, the quartet holds ensemble-in-residence positions at the Oberlin Conser- vatory of Music and at Classic Chamber Concerts in Naples, Florida. After winning the Grand Prize and the Audience Prize in the 2008 Plowman Chamber Music Competi- tion, the Jaspers went on to win the Grand Prize at the 2008 Coleman Competition, First Prize at Chamber Music Yellow Springs 2008, and the Silver Medal at the 2008 and 2009 Fischoff Chamber Music Competitions. They were the first ensemble to win the Yale School of Music’s Horatio Parker Memorial Prize (2009). In 2010 the quartet joined the roster of Astral Artists.

The Jaspers perform pieces ranging from Haydn and Beethoven through Berg, Ligeti,

and living composers. They have already commissioned four string quartets and have been commended for their “programming savvy” (clevelandclassical.com). The quartet has performed throughout the United States and in Canada, England, Italy, Japan, Korea, and Norway. The Jasper Quartet enjoys educational work and has brought over 100 outreach programs into schools. In their Melba and Orville Roleffson Residency at the Banff Centre they embarked on “guerilla chamber music,” performing in unusual settings. They recently completed a two-year Ernst C. Stiefel Quartet Residency at Caramoor.

Originally formed at Oberlin Conservatory, the Jasper Quartet began pursuing a profes- sional career in 2006 as Rice University’s Graduate Quartet-in-Residence. In 2008, the quartet continued its training with the Tokyo String Quartet as the Graduate Quartet- in-Residence at the Yale School of Music. They are named after Jasper National Park.

About the Artists

The Jasper String Quartet is represented by Barrett Vantage Artists

throughout the world and by Astral Artists in Pennsylvania.

Page 4: Tokyo String Quartet

anton webernFive Pieces for String Quartet, Op. 5

Anton Webern’s music is often characterized by its concentration, its compression, and an utter lack of conventional expressions of emotion in music. Given this, it may seem surprising that with his Five Pieces for String Quartet Op. 5, Webern admitted to colleague Alban Berg that the work was connected to the death of his mother, an event that occurred on September 7, 1906 and clearly had a profound impact on the composer. Filled with revolutionary sounds and effects, the Five Pieces (also known as Five Movements) represent one of Webern’s first essays in atonal writing. Though the emotional qualities of the Five Pieces are exceedingly introverted in nature, the work’s origins inspire a deeper look at its expressionist qualities.

There is an almost sensual quality in Webern’s approach here that may not be readily apparent on first glance. This is evidenced in both the treatment of the strings themselves for color and texture, as well as the manner in which Webern isolates a specific tone or interval group. Altering dynamic levels and instrumental timbres around the pitch level are the very essence of Webern’s expressionism – immobilizing the tone and focusing it towards a kind of higher plane, an evolutionary zenith. In many ways, this was simply an extension of post-Romantic, turn-of- the-20th-century thinking: Webern is pushing the Romantic notion of emotional intensity in

art to its core essence. The result is stark, simple, and full of potency.

Though revolutionary in ideology and aesthetic, Webern did not see himself as deviating from history, but as continuing forward on its logical path; this explains his use of certain traditional elements in the formal design of Op. 5. The first movement, for example, can be heard as a tightly compressed sonata form, while the final movement features bits and pieces recalled from the previous movements, not unlike the cyclical motive structure seen in many Romantic works. The middle three movements are examples of Webern’s famous and meticulous brevity – the second and fourth movements are each thirteen measures long, the third takes roughly thirty-five seconds to play.

The Five Pieces were completed in 1909 and first performed in 1910. In 1929, Webern arranged the work for string orchestra. As is the case with his entire body of work, the Five Pieces can seem bizarre and nonsensical on first hearing, but can be greatly rewarding to the adventurous listener through repeated listening and exploration.

– Jacob Adams

Notes on the Program Notes on the Program

wolfgang amadeus mozartString Quintet No. 3 in C major, K. 515

It is not clear why Mozart chose to write for a string quartet with a second viola, as this was not a common ensemble at that time. One influence may have been the huge success of the Italian composer and virtuoso cellist Luigi Boccherini, who wrote sixty-six cello quintets. Mozart took every opportunity to perform his own music, and his preferred instrument was the viola, as evidenced by his duo sonatas for violin and viola and the Sinfonia Concertante. This quintet was certainly important to Mozart’s embarrassing financial difficulties. Michael Puchberg lent money to him partly on the security for the quintet, despite the sweeping popularity of his opera Figaro the previous year. This quintet and the one in G minor, K. 516, though written as a way of taking a break from work on the masterpiece-to-be Don Giovanni, would become regarded as some of Mozart’s greatest chamber music.

Operatic elements permeate this quintet, particularly in the second movement, where theviolin and viola sing an expressive duet while the other voices relax into accompaniment. But Mozart did not turn this composition into a transcription of his much-loved arias. The sonata-form first movement has unusual proportions: an extraordinarily long exposition with rich melodic materials, a surprisingly brief middle development section, and a relatively developmental recapitulation. Mozart took

advantage of the flexibility of the ensemble to create a variety of textures, showcasing his imagination in timbral combinations and varied dialogues.

In the Minuetto, the quintet divides into three distinct parties, with the two upper pairs respon- ding to each other while the cello sings in its own world. The finale is a sonata rondo with a swift tempo, ending with a final declamation in unison.

– Alvin Wong

Page 5: Tokyo String Quartet

Notes on the Program

felix mendelssohnOctet for Strings, Op. 20

Felix Mendelssohn (1809–1849) completed his Octet in E-flat Major, Op. 20 in October 1825 at only sixteen years of age. The quintessential child prodigy, Mendelssohn was already a prolific composer, having written and published numerous chamber works for combinations of strings and piano, dozens of Lieder, and a symphony. Although he had previously composed for both smaller and larger ensembles, the Octet represented an intersection of these genres. Scored for double string quartet, Mendelssohn’s instrumentation had only one precedent: an octet by Louis Spohr (1784–1859) of 1814. In Spohr’s work, the two string quartets are treated as separate units that interact in an antiphonal manner, hearkening back to the cori spezzati of sixteenth century Venice. Mendelssohn’s work, by contrast, combined the forces into a unified ensemble, which gave rein to a wide variety of scoring possibilities. While on one hand, the work contains the intimate and soloistic textures characteristic of chamber music, on the other hand, certain moments – as, for example, the “heroic” beginning – point to symphonic gestures. While the energy and lightness of the composer’s youth is evident throughout the piece, it was considered to be one of his first substantial early works, and still holds a prominent place in the canon. The octet draws clearly on features of what we now regard as the great works of the past – the intricate contrapuntal textures of Bach,

the crisp clarity of Mozart, and the boldness and dynamic range of Beethoven. Yet even as the work is firmly grounded in the past, its musical language points forward to a warm and unabashed Romanticism. In 1821, Mendelssohn had been introduced to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832), whose encouragement greatly affected the young composer, inspiring in Mendelssohn a sense of the phantasmagoric. The Scherzo of the Octet, which was directly influenced by the Walpurgisnachtstraum scene from Goethe’s Faust, was to be the first of his characteristic “fairy” scherzos, and was the direct precursor to the Scherzo from A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

– Reena Esmail

Page 6: Tokyo String Quartet

Oneppo Chamber Music Series 2012–2013 Patrons

The Yale School of Music gratefully acknowledges the generosity of its donors.Following are the patrons of the Oneppo Chamber Music Series as of September 26, 2012.

To find out more about becoming a Yale School of Music Patron:

» music.yale.edu/giving

You can also add a contribution to your ticket purchase to any Yale School of Music concerts.

Concert Office · 203 432-4158

Charles Ives Circle$600 and aboveVictoria Keator DePalma Ronald & Susan Netter

Paul Hindemith Circle$250 to $599Henry & Joan Binder Mr. & Mrs. Douglas Crowley John and Stacey MCG Gemmill Mark Bauer & Joseph W. Gordon Rev. Hugh MacDonald Marc & Margaret Mann Barbara & Bill Nordhaus Ray Fair & Sharon Oster Patty & Tom Pollard Jean & Ronald Rozett Maggie & Herb Scarf Josephine Shepard Drs. Lorraine Siggins & Braxton McKee Bill Tower, in memory of Liz Tower Abby N. Wells Elizabeth B. Womer

Horatio Parker Circle$125 to $249AnonymousStephen Anderson & Janine Anderson-Bays

Susan Anderson Carole & Arthur Broadus Anne P. Reed Dean, in memory of Prof. & Mrs. E.B. Reed Richard Flavell Paul Guida and Patricia LaCamera Norman S. Hewitt Barbara & Ivan Katz Joseph & Constance LaPalombara Peggy & Ramsay MacMullen Dr. Leonard E. Munstermann Peter & Kathryn Patrikis Mary Jane & Steve Pinchus Ernst & Rosemarie Prelinger Jules Prown Maryanne & W. Dean Rupp Helen L. Sacks Nathan M. Silverstein Clifford & Carolyn Slayman Emily Aber & Robert Wechsler

Samuel Simons Sanford Circle$50 to $124Anonymous (4) Nina Adams & Moreson Kaplan Susan S. Addiss Stephen & Judith August Irma & Robert Bachman Richard & Nancy Beals David & Carolyn Belt Victor & Susan Bers Jerome Berson Donald Bialos, M.D. & Saundra Bialos Ethel & Sidney Blatt Eric & LouAnn Bohman Robert & Linda BurtWalter Cahn Anne and Guido Calabresi Mimi & John Cole Joe & Phyllis Crowley Drew Days & Ann Langdon Emma Dickey Anne-Marie & William Foltz Ellen Cohen & Steven Fraade Geraldine Frei Kalman L. Watsky & Deborah Fried Clara Genetos Dr. Lauretta E. Grau Elizabeth Haas Kenneth R. Hanson Robert & Noel Heimer Faith Hentschel Bente & Walter Jr. Hierholzer Jay & Marjorie Hirshfield Marilyn A. Katz Elise K. Kenney Alan & Joan Kliger

Jack & Elaine Lawson Stan LeavyColin & Suki McLaren William & Irene Miller Sara Ohly Dr. E. Anthony Petrelli Marc Rubenstein & Patricia Pierce Michael & Kuni Schmertzler Emilie & Richard D. Schwartz Cis & Jim Serling John & Laura Lee Simon Joan & Tom Steitz Betsy & Lawrence Stern Barbara & Michael Susman Alan & Betty Trachtenberg George Veronis Nonna D. Wellek, Ph.D. Ken & Marge Wiberg Herbert & Hannah Winer Marcia & Richard Witten Werner & Elizabeth Wolf

Gustave Jacob Stoeckel Circle$25 to $49Gusta & Bob Abels Anne-Marie N. AllenMarie Borroff Charlotte B. Brenner Judith Colton & Wayne Meeks Peter & Diana Cooper Mr. & Mrs. Dana Barbara Fussiner Howard & Sylvia Garland Jane L. Jervis Ann Marlowe Marlene Martin Alice. S. Miskimin Priscilla Waters Norton Paul PfefferJoseph & Susan Saccio Karen & Mel Selsky Sheila & Arthur Taub Antoinette Tyndall

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P.O. Box 208246, New Haven, CT · 203 432-4158 music.yale.edu

Robert Blocker, Dean

Upcoming Events

New Music New Haven

october 4

Morse Recital Hall | Thursday | 8 pm New Music New Haven

Featuring the world premiere of Allegory of the Cave for string quartet and piano by faculty composer Christopher

Theofanidis, along with music by graduate composers.

Free admission.

Lou Donaldson Quartet

october 5

Morse Recital Hall | Friday | 8 pm Ellington Jazz Series

“My first impulse is always to describe Lou Donaldson as the greatest alto saxophonist

in the world.” –Will Friedwald, New York Sun Tickets $20–30, Students $10.

Wei-Yi Yang, piano

october 10

Morse Recital Hall | Wednesday | 8 pm Horowitz Piano Series

Featuring Granados’s piano suite Goyescas: Los major enamorados, with projections of Goya’s art, alongside music inspired by

Spain by Debussy and Ravel. Tickets $12–22, Students $6–9.

Yale Philharmonia

october 19

Woolsey Hall | Friday | 8 pm Yale Philharmonia

Peter Oundjian, guest conductor. Verdi: Overture to La Forza del Destino; Bartók:

Piano Concerto No. 3, with Suzana Bartal, piano; Shostakovich: Symphony No. 12.

Free admission.

Concert Programs: Krista Johnson, Carol Jackson, Julie Blindauer

Public Relations & Media: Dana Astmann, Monica Ong Reed, Austin Kase

Operations: Tara Deming, Chris MelilloPiano Curators: Brian Daley, William Harold

Recording Studio: Eugene Kimball

WSHU 91.1 fm is the media sponsor of the Oneppo Chamber Music Series at the Yale School of Music.