Poignant Parting Notes from
Canton Symphony Soloists
By Tom Wachunas
Mozart, Schubert, Reger: Lauren Roth (violin), Zsche Chuang Rimbo Wong
(viola), Hyunsoo Kim (piano), Cable Recital Hall, Canton Symphony Orchestra
(chamber series), Canton, Ohio (USA), May 3, 2013
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Sonata for Violin and Piano in G Major
(1778)
Franz Schubert: Sonata for Arpeggione (Viola) and Piano
(1824)
Max Reger: Trio for Violin, Viola and Piano in b minor (1891)
When violinist Lauren Roth stunned a packed
Umstattd Hall last October 7 with her breathtaking performance of Menotti’s Violin
Concerto in a minor, it was
abundantly clear that the Canton Symphony Orchestra (CSO) had acquired a
world-class Concertmaster. Since then, she regularly provided a thrilling
dimensionality to programs throughout the CSO’s 2012-2013 concert season.
The
season concluded on May 3 at Cable Recital Hall with a chamber concert that
featured Roth along with CSO principal violist Zsche Chuang Rimbo Wong and
guest pianist Hyunsoo Kim. This was an enchanting program delivered with
impeccable technique and inspired readings of the works’ many emotional
nuances.
Mozart’s Sonata for Violin and Piano in G
Major (K.301) is a harmonically charming intertwining of the two instruments.
The give-and-take exchanges between Roth and Kim during the lilting first
movement were crisp and spirited, as were the dance-like syncopations of the
second, with just a hint of somber nostalgia in the middle passages.
There are similar emotional tinges in
Schubert’s Sonata for Arpeggione and Piano. Schubert composed the work in 1824
specifically for the Arpeggione, a six-stringed instrument fretted and tuned
like a guitar but bowed like a cello. The instrument never caught on. By the
time Schubert finally published his work in 1871, he included his arrangement
for cello or viola.
In any event, here violist Wong captivated
the audience from the start with the sheer depth of her sound. Her warm
sonority is well suited to the plaintive, melancholic character of the work’s
opening melody as well as the more sustained, contemplative inflections in the
second movement.
Wong’s
tonal subtleties are remarkably evocative, and a fitting complement to Roth’s soaring clarity and lyricism. It is indeed a charismatic
chemistry which has produced numerous magical moments in past CSO performances
as well as on this occasion.
Max Reger’s Trio for Violin, Viola and
Piano, somewhat reminiscent of Brahms, is a beautiful and riveting
three-movement work, rich with textures, rhythms and color. At times it
conjures images of a highly animated three-way conversation. It begins in a
brooding spirit and from there hovers alternately between controlled tumult and
sustained solemnity. There is a distinct aura of sadness in the music, as if
hearing a lingering goodbye, performed here with passionate intensity.
This particular mood of the work took on an
especially poignant relevance in knowing that it marked the final CSO
appearance for both the violist and the violinist. Wong will be moving on to
Philadelphia to pursue her graduate studies, and Roth has been recently named
Concertmaster of the Tucson Symphony. I wish both of them continued success and
my deepest gratitude for their superb artistry.
That said, I prefer to think of their
departure not so much as a CSO loss as it is an opportunity to remain the
potent magnet that it is for drawing musicians of their caliber.
Photos:
Lauren Roth (top), Zsche Chuang Rimbo Wong
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