The Fine Arts Quartet Returns
They ended 55-year UWM residency last year, but return for all-Beethoven concert.
The Fine Arts Quartet returns to the UW-Milwaukee Zelazo Center this Sunday afternoon to offer an all-Beethoven concert.
One year ago the ensemble ended their 55-year residency at the University. The two concerts were sold out. The community response may have been motivated by the expectation that the quartet would dissolve, after a historic 72-year history.
Last summer, the ensemble returned for a multi-event festival with community-sponsorship – the result of fund-raising by the Friends of the Fine Arts Quartet in partnership with Saint John’s On The Lake and the UW-Milwaukee Peck School of the Arts.
This year, the quartet begins a 2019 season in Milwaukee with the Sunday concert at Zelazo Center. They will return July 14-18 for a three-concert festival. Arts Wisconsin is now a collaborating partner as fiscal receiver for community donations.
Sunday’s concert features three works by Ludwig van Beethoven, whose composing career has been measured by substantial evolutionary periods. The Fine Arts Quartet will play one work not published in Beethoven’s lifetime, an exercise prepared while Beethoven was mastering the counterpoint techniques of Johann Sebastian Bach. The Prelude and Fugue for String Quartet in F Major, (Hess 30) closely tracks the sensibilities of Baroque performance in a faithful representation of that era.
One of the Beethoven’s early quartets, String Quartet in G Major, Op. 18, No. 2, reflects Beethoven’s debt to Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The opening movement offers a courtly grace that earned the quartet the nickname “Compliments.” Critic Theodor Helm described the scenes as an “eighteen-century salon, with all the ceremonious display and flourish typical of the period … with bows and gracious words of greeting.”
Beethoven’s ninth quartet, String Quartet in C Major, Op. 59, No. 3 represents his growing independence. In 1805, Beethoven was confronting the severity of his hearing loss. He emerged from deep depression determined to write revolutionary works. Three Opus 59 quartets were premiered in 1807. In a sketchbook containing the quartets, Beethoven asked himself the rhetorical question: “Can anything in the world prevent you from expressing your soul in music?” As he did so, the world of western classical music transitioned from a Classical, formal style to the Romantic era of composition.
The quartet opens with signs of uncertainty and an andante movement is dominated by melancholy thoughts. But Beethoven chose a very different conclusion. Critic Mark Steinberg celebrates the “heroic” finale. “At the arrival of the last movement revelations indeed come fast and furious. It begins with a fugal exposition where instrument after instrument enters with a virtuosic, quicksilver theme as if the theme takes wing and soars. It feels as if one by one the masks come off and all are involved in a whirlwind celebration of energy and possibility.”
Last November, Fine Arts Quartet recorded several little-known Beethoven works to contribute to a comprehensive CD box set to be issued by Naxos this spring. The concert serves as an early start to a few years of worldwide celebration of the 250th anniversary of Beethoven’s birth in 1770.
Enjoy a bit of music history as one composer’s works reflect Baroque, Classical and Romantic styles.
The Fine Arts Quartet performs at the UW-Milwaukee’s Helene Zelazo Center for Performing Arts, 2419 E. Kenwood Blvd. The concert begins at 3:00 p.m. preceded by a pre-talk at 2:00 pm. The concert is free. With open seating, no tickets are required.
The Fine Arts Quartet returns for a summer festival on July 14-18. Those concerts will feature several Mozart piano concertos transcribed for piano, string quartet and bass including the world premiere of a transcription of Mozart’s only piano concerto for two pianos.
Preview
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PianoArts Festival Features Rising Stars
May 28th, 2024 by Michael Barndt -
Four Nations Ensemble Goes For Baroque
May 13th, 2024 by Michael Barndt -
Mozart on Prospect Avenue
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