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Chamber
THE FAMILIAR, THE RARE AND THE NEW
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, March 31, 2013
Sonoma State's resident Trio Navarro has a well-earned reputation for eclectic programming, and in their Easter Sunday concert in Weill Hall, they chose the familiar, the rare and the new. The new was SSU faculty composer Brian Wilson's "And Ezra the Scribe Stood Upon a Pulpit," a trio for horn, vi...
Chamber
SOLID GOLD FROM THE PARKER STRING QUARTET
by Steve Osborn
Friday, February 15, 2013
Santa Rosa has been blessed with three superlative chamber music concerts during the past month, beginning with the Calder String Quartet in late January, followed by the Alexander String Quartet with violist Toby Appel in early February, and culminating with the Parker String Quartet one day after ...
Chamber
FROM THE MAGISTERIAL TO THE MACABRE
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, February 03, 2013
Two more disparate chamber works could not be imagined in Weill Hall Feb. 3 when the Trio Navarro presented the Shostakovich Trio in E Minor and Dvorak’s “Dumky,” also in E minor. Both masterpieces have riveting audience interest but are worlds apart in structure and harmonic language. Dvorak’s tri...
Chamber
AMARYLLIS TRIO IN FULL FLOWER
by Terry McNeill
Saturday, January 26, 2013
The West County’s Amaryllis Trio began their winter concert season Jan. 26 in a charming Sebastopol home. Led by the ubiquitous pianist Sonia Tubridy, the Amaryllis programmed the entire first half with Schumann’s late third Piano Trio, Op. 110. A passionate and wild work, the trio demands an aggres...
Chamber
NATIVE VIRTUOSITY
by Terry McNeill
Saturday, January 05, 2013
Violinist Nigel Armstrong is becoming a virtuoso staple for North Bay concerts, having played locally over the past three years in private homes, with symphonic groups and in several formal recitals. January 5 found him giving a benefit recital for the Sonoma Classical Music Society in his Sonoma ho...
Chamber
FROM TRIO TO SEXTET
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Sonoma State’s estimable Trio Navarro, long at the center of the North Bay chamber music scene, morphed into the Navarro Chamber Players on Nov. 18 in a Weill Hall concert that was both exhilarating and puzzling. The trio’s violinist Roy Malan and cellist Jill Rachuy Brindel were absent. Taking thei...
Chamber
ADÉS' ARCADIANA HIGHLIGHTS CALDER QUARTET CONCERT IN MILL VALLEY CHAMBER SERIES
by John Metz
Sunday, November 04, 2012
The Calder Quartet saved the day Nov. 4 by stepping in at last minute to play for the Mill Valley Chamber Music Society’s second concert of this season. Originally set to appear was the Prague-based Prazak Quartet which cancelled due to an ill violinist. The Calder Quartet had performed the previous...
Chamber
ADLER FELLOWS WOW AUDIENCE IN NEW CAROLE ELLIS HALL CONCERT
by Mary Gillespie
Friday, October 12, 2012
A nearly full house attended an inaugural chamber concert October 12 in the Carole Ellis Auditorium of SRJC’s Petaluma campus, the first time a formal chamber music concert was heard in the newly refurbished hall. The musicians were four San Francisco Opera Center’s Adler Fellows with pianist and...
Chamber
BEETHOVEN VARIATIONS HIGHLIGHT CULP-WOO RECITAL AT OAKMONT
by Terry McNeill
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Cellist Jennifer Culp brought a surprise to her Oakmont Concert Series performance on Sept. 13 when she opened with Barber’s early Cello Sonata, Op. 6. Beginning with a tonal yet difficult to assimilate work was a good choice, as mostly familiar pieces filled out the recital before about 125 patrons...
Chamber
BEETHOVEN ON PARADE
by Steve Osborn
Saturday, March 31, 2012
Movies have subtitles and operas have supertitles, but the Borromeo String Quartet has metatitles--titles so substantial that they replicate the entire performance, just within sight of the actual performers. Instead of words, the “metatitles” (i.e., the musical score projected on a screen) contain ...
CHAMBER REVIEW
Ensemble Vermillian / Saturday, January 07, 2012
Francis Blaker, recorder; David Wilson, violin; Barbara Blaker Krumdieck, cello; Katherine Heater, harpsichord; William Simms, lute and guitar

Ensemble Vermillian (l to r): Simms, Krumdieck, Heater, Blaker and Wilson

VERMILLIAN'S INSTRUMENTAL VIRTUOSITY HIGHLIGHTS RARE BIBER AND COLISTA WORKS

by Joanna Bramel Young
Saturday, January 07, 2012

A top quality baroque concert was presented at Santa Rosa’s Waldorf School Jan. 7 featuring the Ensemble Vermillian. Among the five performers at least nine instruments were used, and the variety of this instrumentation brought 17th and 18th Century musical gems to life.

The Vermillian in the Sophia Hall event, hosted by Waldorf teacher and musician Isabel Wundsam, included Frances Blaker (soprano, alto and tenor recorders); David Wilson, baroque violin; Barbara Blaker Krumdieck (baroque cello); Katherine Heater (harpsichord and small organ); and William Simms playing the baroque guitar and theobro. The theobro is a large lute with bass strings extending nearly six feet in length.

Except for a Bach Flute Sonata, BWV 1030, the program’s works were not well known. Through transcription, common in the baroque era, the group has made rarely-heard pieces their own, and therefore accessible to modern audiences.

Lelio Colista’s Symphonia opened the concert and the bright little soprano recorder balanced well with the ensemble playing. Typical of 17th Century Italian sonatas, one movement gracefully and seamlessly merged into another. In this work the harpsichord, cello and theorbo were a tightly linked unit, supporting the brilliant soloistic duet between recorder and violin.

The Bach was originally scored for flute, obligato harpsichord and basso continuo, and in Bach’s original work the right hand of the harpsichord player matches the flute in its solo passages. The left hand supports the bass line. In her transcription Ms. Blaker scored the flute for alto recorder and gave the usual right-hand soloistic harpsichord part to the violin. This relegated the harpsichord to a continuo part with the cello. Ms. Heater had to invent a right hand part for her elegant instrument. In the long opening Andante this reviewer would have preferred hearing Bach’s version, without the violin, as the latter’s part sounded fragmented and tended to overpower the recorder. The hauntingly beautiful Largo e dolce, the second movement, was played as Bach wrote it – just the recorder and harpsichord. This movement allowed the harpsichord to be cleanly heard, “singing” in a most expressive and lyrical mode. The last Presto – Allegro is a rollicking gigue with daunting repeated hesitations and cross rhythms, and it worked extremely well with the added violin.

Ms. Blaker announced to the audience that the Bach Sonata was the “main course,” but the “sorbet” was to come: a wonderful short sonata by Antonio Bertali. It was the highlight of the program with the guitar, harpsichord and cello accompanying the soprano recorder and violin. There were brilliant and contrasting ornamented parts with the guitar strumming adding strong rhythms. The cello also got into the mix by adding sinuous runs to the exciting whole.

Mr. Wilson demonstrated fine violin technique in one of Biber’s “Rosary Sonatas.” A renowned violinist in his day, Biber gave each of his 15 Rosary works a different tuning, and here Mr. Wilson tuned his violin to an altered tuning, called scordatura. With the organ, cello and theorbo accompanying, the work was a set of variations on a theme, and Mr. Wilson performed exuberant ornaments while the continuo supported with a driving four-bar descending ostinato bass.

All of the Vermillian players demonstrated great facility with their instruments and through research, tight ensemble and virtuoso playing brought less familiar repertoire to the appreciative audience.



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