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| Roger Wilkie and Robert Thies welcomed by the audience at Rolling Hills United Methodist Church. |
REVIEW
Roger Wilkie and Robert Thies, Second Sundays at Two, Rolling Hills United Methodist Church
BARBARA GLAZER, Guest Reviewer
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| Roger Wilkie and Robert Thies. |
It was first performed in 1877 as a violin/orchestral piece by Prague’s Provisional Theater Orchestra in their annual concert. Dvořák’s version for piano and violin, played here, was revised from the orchestral piece and dedicated to violinist František Ondříček (1857-1922) but was never played in public during the composer's lifetime.
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| Dvořák in 1879. |
I loved the Thies/Wilkie performance: the beautiful melodies played with impeccable lyrical taste and phrasing and superb technical prowess: one would never discern from Wilkie's fluid account how difficult the key of F minor is for a violinist.
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| George Bridgetower. |
The Kreutzer presents an array of difficulties: its length (about 40 minutes), its technical demands on both instrumentalists, and its transitional style between late Classicism and Romanticism. In structure and forms it is Classical with a sonata-form first movement, a kind of rondo in the last, and the middle movement a set of five variations—a forte of Beethoven. But, adumbrating the Romantic movement, it should be played with drama, high energy, and in the designated “concertante style”—the instruments being co-equals, the piano never an accompanist, but two virtuoso instrumentalists playing as if in a mini- concerto.
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| Title-page of the first edition of the Kreutzer Sonata, noting that it was written "in uno stile molto concertante come d’un concerto.” |
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| Sonya and Leo Tolstoy. |
Tolstoy’s novella is an argument for sexual abstinence to avoid our “swinish,” “animalistic” proclivities which hinder the attainment of humanity and cause us such agony, and strife. His wife Sonya (Sophia) penned two rebuttal novellas (Whose Fault, 1891-94; Song Without Words, 1898, both unpublished during her lifetime), citing her husband as insensitive, unfeeling, and growing more and more ascetic and combative in a stormy marriage once marked by mutual love (and 13 children): Tolstoy did leave home in 1910, ending their marriage.
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| The Kreutzer Sonata by Rene Xavier Prinet. |
In 1901 the artist Rene Xavier Prinet (1861-1946), had painted The Kreutzer Sonata: a beautifully dressed pianist, her fingers still touching the keyboard as she stands to receive an impassioned kiss from her violinist lover—an image that in 1932 (and for years) was used in the perfume advertisement for "Tabu, the Forbidden Fragrance."
It's no wonder that impassioned music, in fact all types of music, have sometimes been censored by governments or banned outright by religious sects. Beethoven is said to have opined that "to play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable." His Kreutzer Sonata may be a transitional composition as noted, but it needs to feel less Classical and more Romantic, more earthy, more impassioned, more fiery, if we are to understand its cultural effects and as we hear in the most superb performances: Augustine Hadelich/Orion Wiess and Patricia Kopatchinskaja/Fazil Say, and close behind: Gidon Kremer/Martha Argerich.
In the Classical Crossroads recital we heard, Robert Thies on piano was outstanding, but I felt Roger Wilkie needed to punch it up—even his body stance was so collected and straight, so classical—so that overall, this good performance left me hungry for a more impassioned account. I have viewed this concert on the usual excellent Vimeo video several times, and have listened to many other performances. As a non-professional I have felt hesitant to write my impression, which also accounts for my delay in contributing this review.
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Images: The performers: Classical Crossroads, inc.; Dvořák, Bridgetower, Kreutzer title-page, the Tolstoys, The Kreutzer Sonata: Wikimedia Commons.







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