"Serious music-making
is unusual on a gala program. But the Young Audiences benefit on Sunday afternoon offered an
uncommon amount, sandwiched in with the speechifying, the promotional video and the glitz.
The organization brings live performances to school audiences, and its Roster
Sunday included the best of the pros and the best of the new generation. There were two
string quartets: the ad hoc ensemble of violinists Pamela Frank and Lynn Chang, violist
Marcus Thompson and cellist Yo-Yo Ma; and the extraordinary young and gifted, Boston-based
Amaryllis Quartet, comprised of high school violinists Ayano Ninomiya and Mariana Gren,
violist Melissa Reardon and cellist Wendy Law.
The Amaryllis is coached by
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BSO
principal second violin
Marylou Speaker Churchill and violist Eugene Lehner, formerly of the Kolisch Quartet and BSO.
The players shuffled and reshuffled themselves throughout the concert, with all
eight joining together to play the "Primavera" section from Vivaldi's Four
Seasons, " the Mendelssohn Octet and Dvorak's "Songs My Mother Taught Me."
The first half of the program consisted of single movements, and each half
opened with an encore - "Dueling Fiddles" (an arrangement of the popular "Feudin'
Banjos") and the Dvorak. The second half was supposed to be limited to a single
movement from the Mendelssohn, but someone
wisely decided that the music and the players were strong enough to warrant a full
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performance of all four
movements from the Octet.
To conclude the first half, there was the Vivaldi in an elegant performance
featuring Lynn Chang in the solo role and the rest of the ensemble making up a most
accomplished "orchestra."
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Octet's performance was the most satisfying and complete, with Pamela Frank as first
violin, the most exuberant with Yo-Yo Ma and Wendy Law laying down a passionate bass
line. |
It was in this piece, the most
complete, fully realized and demanding of one's concentration, that the players and the
audience seemed to have the most fun."
-Ellen Pfeifer
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