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Dvorak Piano Quintet July 30, 2013 André Previn American composer, conductor, pianist born: 6 April 1929, Berlin Trio for Piano, Oboe and Bassoon Lively Slow Jaunty American conductor/composer/pianist André Previn enjoys celebrity on many counts and scores. He was recognized as a gifted jazz pianist while yet a teenager in Los Angeles, and his talents as an arranger soon found him setting films scores to popular Broadway musicals, for which he received four Academy Awards. As a conductor he served as music director for the Houston, Pittsburgh and Los Angeles symphony orchestras, as well as the London Philharmonic and the London Symphony. From among Previn's original catalog, his Trio for Piano, Oboe and Bassoon is a delightful tour de force, rich with diverse influences. Scored in 1994, the work was commissioned by the Orchestra of St. Luke's, with additional support from the Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust and the National Endowment for the Arts. Panache on the wing might be a fair subtitle for the first movement offering pizzazz and flare right from the downbeat. The Lively energy alternates to-and-fro with lyrical interludes, all set under 20th century harmonies and a smattering of mixed meters. For contrast, Previn provides a plaintive and Slow centerpiece, with modern but aria-like narrations from the oboe and bassoon, set over beautifully applied harmonies in the manner of a jazz reverie. Titled Jaunty, the Finale flies out of the gate with frenetic rhythms in the oboe and bassoon. Perhaps a wink at Leonard Bernstein conjures a few sassy motifs à la New York. But again, for a change of pace, a momentary intermezzo or two blends a few tender changes within some real 'down home' studio jazz. For good measure, lots of accented, mixed meter motifs keep us guessing clear to a punchy close in B-flat. David Bruce American composer Born: 1970, Stamford, CT Steampunk for Oboe, Clarinet, Bassoon Horn, Violin, Viola, Cello, Contrabass About Steampunk the composer writes: "Steampunk was originally a science fiction genre but has become a style of design, fashion and sub-culture. It centres on a kind of 'alternative history' - an alternative universe which looks a lot like technologically- advanced Victorian England, where everything is steam-powered. Brass, copper and wood feature prominently in steam-powered devices like watches, x-ray machines and futuristic steam-powered cars. "When Carnegie Hall offered me this commission based around the Beethoven Septet, the horn and bassoon immediately stood out to me as defining colours of the group, to which I added the oboe. We might view Classical Music itself as a kind of steampunk music. It's one of the very few areas in music performance where unamplified, non-electronic sound is still the norm. "Steampunk is in five movements. The brief opening movement has wild fanfares on clarinet and french horn and is followed by a dark, brooding passacaglia. The third lyrical movement was inspired by the 'armillary sphere', a model of the celestial sphere often found in steampunk design, and I hope the movement captures the impression of a mysterious spiralling celestial mechanism. The fourth movement is much more light-hearted and seems to hint at strange ticking clocks. The final movement starts with a desolate stillness, but gradually and relentlessly - indeed, as if powered by steam - builds up speed until arriving at a break-neck denouement." Antonin Dvorak Bohemian composer born: 8 September 1841, Nelahozeves, Bohemia;; died: 1 May 1904, Prague, Czechoslovakia Quintet for Piano and Strings in A major, op.81 Allegro ma non tanto Dumka - Andante con moto Scherzo - Furiant: Molto vivace Finale - Allegro Dvorak scored his Piano Quintet in A major in 1887. The work is dedicated to his admiring friend, Dr. B. Neureutter, a professor of medicine and generous art patron. A bit unusual is that about fifteen years earlier the composer had written a preceding quintet (op.5), also set in A major. It appears Dvorak had a special fondness for the musical timbres that resulted from piano and strings in that key (by contrast, his Violin Concerto, op.53, is cast in A minor). About opus 81, historian John Clapham wrote: "Laughter and tears, sorrow and gaiety, are found side by side. All are presented in a wide range of instrumental coloring, and through the whole sweeps the life-blood of vital rhythm." A lovely tune from the cello provides a mini prelude to the first movement Allegro, setting the tone of the Piano Quintet overall. But the dolce mood is replied almost at once with a zesty escape from the piano. And so it goes - swinging to and fro from plaintive poetry to peppered, dance-like fragments, blending back and forth from minor to major. For the second movement Andante, Dvorak conjures one of his favorite forms - an Eastern European dumka, a plaintive heart song without words, alternately sad or spirited. The lyrics in the piano also reflect the composer's admiration for the poignant intonations of Chopin. But stand by for a tarantellalike dance, a delightful escape before soft poetry turns down the lights. Scherzo means joking or playful, which Dvorak embellishes with a dance cue known as a furiant, another of his favorite forms. While the music digresses from the spry triple-duple rhythms of a standard furiant, the frisky momentum prevails everywhere, but again swinging 'yin-yang' from sassy scampers to dreamy tenderness. But from the first Disney-like opening bars, the Finale-Allegro takes to the breeze and sails without pause until a tender souvenir right before the nimble accents which close the piece. ----------------------------------------------------------------------program notes by Edward Yadzinsky