CMT: The Parker String Quartet makes its recording debut with Bartók’s String Quartets Nos. 2 and 5, on the ZigZag label. The Second Quartet, composed between 1915 and 1917 and premiered on 03 March 1918 in Budapest, appeared ten years after the First Quartet. Had Bartók exhausted his lyricism and Romanticism with the Second Quartet, do you think?
DSM: He would’ve been 34 years old in 1915—how could it be that any part of his compositional imagination and enthusiasm had been exhausted at that stage? The influence of Debussy may have been waning a bit for him, yes. And the psychological effect of World War I should not be underestimated … The requirements and proclivities of the Waldbauer-Kerpely Quartet, who debuted the piece and to whom Bartók dedicated the work, may have entered in as well. And then there was the zeitgeist of atonal/12-tone writing. He was not writing in a vacuum! That, and the fact that he had found his own ‘chops’ by then . . .
CMT: The Fifth Quartet, commissioned in 1935, was a more tonal work again, evocative of—or responsive to—pre-war politics in Europe?
DSM: And the Parker Quartet’s account of the Fifth seems edgy enough and despairing enough to be an effective political communiqué. You knowlater this year the Parker Quartet will record the complete string quartets of György Ligeti for Naxos . . .
CMT: What else? Some time ago the Parker String Quartet was selected for the prestigious Professional String Quartet Training Program at the New England Conservatory of Music, where the group was founded. All of the quartet’s members are all pursuing graduate degrees in performance and chamber music at NEC.
DSM: They’re noteworthy, too, for performing in bars and clubs up and down the East Coast. This Fall, the Parkers continue this with a “residency” at Barbès Bar and Performance Space in Brooklyn. Did you see Anne Midgette’s article about this in the New York Times on June 24? Barbès is owned by two French-born musicians, and its back room offers a diverse range of entertainment—from international film nights to authors’ readings to chamber music. Liquid entertainment as well . . .
French 75
- 3 ounces (100 gm) crushed ice
- 1 1/2 ounces (50 mL) dry gin
- 1 tablespoon (15 mL) lemon juice
- 1 teaspoon (5 gm) confectioners’ sugar
- 6 ounces (20 cL) chilled champagne
- 1 twist lemon
Aperol 86
- 2 ounces (60 mL) Aperol
- 1 ounce lemon juice
- 1 ounce (30 mL) lime juice
- 1 1/2 ounces (45 mL) orange juice
- 1 twist lemon
Dubonnet Negroni
- 1 1/2 ounces (45 mL) Campari
- 1 1/2 ounces (45 mL) Dubonnet blanc
- 1 1/2 ounces (45 mL) gin
- 1 twist lemon
Citron Cosmopolitan
- 2 ounces (60 mL) Absolut Citron vodka
- 1 ounce (30 mL) triple sec
- 1 ounce (30 mL) cranberry juice
- 1 tablespoon (15 mL) lime juice
- 1 twist lemon
CMT: The Parker String Quartet’s upcoming performances—ones without such tasty refreshments as those available at Barbès, unfortunately—include:
- July 4 : Theatre de Bordeaux : Mozart: String Quartet in G Major, K. 387; Ligeti: String Quartet No. 2 (“Métamorphoses Nocturnes”); Ravel: String Quartet in F Major
- July 10-12 : Yellow Barn Residency : Amherst, MA and Putney, VT
- July 19: Caramoor Center for Music and Arts : Katonah : Ligeti: Andante and Allegro; Auerbach: premiere of new music; Smetana: String Quartet in E Minor, No. 1 (“From My Life”)
- July 27: Radio France : Montpellier : Karol Beffa: new music premiere; Smetana: String Quartet No.1 in E Minor, “From My Life”
- August 1: Luberon Music Festival : Cabrieres d’Avignon : Haydn: String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 74 No. 3 (“The Reiter”); Ligeti: String Quartet No. 2; Smetana: String Quartet in E Minor, No. 1 (“From My Life”)
- August 3: Luberon Music Festival : Roussillon : Haydn: String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 74 No. 3 (“The Reiter”); Ligeti: String Quartet No. 2; Smetana: String Quartet in E Minor, No. 1 (“From My Life”)
- August 5: Luberon Music Festival : Abbaye de Silvacane : Haydn: String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 74 No. 3 (“The Reiter”); Ligeti: String Quartet No. 2; Smetana: String Quartet in E Minor, No. 1 (“From My Life”)
- August 21-22: Avery Fisher Hall, Lincoln Center, New York : Haydn: String Quartet in G Minor, Op. 74 No. 3 (“The Reiter”)
- September 16: Barbes Bar (‘Residency’), Brooklyn : Ligeti: Three Quartets
DSM: What do Ligeti’s Quartet No.2 (“Metamorphoses Nocturnes”) and Smetana’s Quartet No.1 (“From My Life”) have in common? What contrasts between these pieces could explain their cohesiveness on a program?
CMT: Well, there are lyrical and expressionistic features that in some ways resemble the Bartók quartets—so there’s a cohesiveness in the Parker’s repertoire in that sense. Ligeti’s material provides the performers an opportunity to express a wide range of human emotions—from introspection to rage; from humor to regret; from longing to acceptance. Remember that it was 1944—György Ligeti was just 21 when he composed the String Quartet No. 1 (‘Métamorphoses Nocturnes’) and he was yet to establish his reputation as a bad boy of classical music. He was a Jew, and in 1943 he was forced into labor by the Nazis. His brother was deported to the Mauthausen concentration camp. His parents were sent to Auschwitz. His mother was the only other survivor of the immediate family, besides György. This Métamorphoses Nocturnes quartet is understandably edgy, idealistic, angry, inconsolable, impatient. It’s punkish music with something to prove—it’s a young piece: it remembers everything, and forgives nothing! Why should it forgive? Why should it forget? How could it forget, even if it wanted to!
DSM: But the Smetana, like the Ligeti, is also dealing with metamorphoses—of middle age, of absurd personal loss and grief, of issues of youth coming to terms with the realities and conflicts and limitations of life. This quartet was composed in 1876, when Smetana was 52 years old. When he was 31, his beloved four-year-old daughter, Bedřiska, died. His third child died nine months later, and this is when Smetana committed himself to composition, producing the Piano Trio in G minor. This piece is full of sadness and despair, making use of phrases that are cut short, symbolically parallel to his children’s lives. And, like Beethoven, Smetana’s creativity was haunted by his tinnitus and progressive loss of hearing. His E minor Quartet (“From My Life”) might be considered to be his way of coping with his serial losses. Smetana’s psychological state is varying through this piece—in some places he seems deeply despondent. The fourth movement references his ‘fateful ringing in my ears... which announced the beginning of my cursèd deafness’, with the first violin’s piercing high E over the pianissimo tremolo in the other strings. There is after this some recovery or respite—passages that are positive and peaceful. So I think Smetana found here a resignation to ‘the catastrophe of my complete deafness’—a grudging acceptance, a coping that could not manage to forget or forgive the loss. Charles Griswold’s new book is, I’d say, the latest, greatest treatise on ethics of forgiving and forgetting.
CMT: So Smetana finds a consolation without lasting solace—and Ligeti finds solace that’s not lasting.
DSM: That’s what binds these pieces together, I think. At any rate, that’s some of what I hear in them. Smetana “up,” and Ligeti with a “twist.”
O ne of the lessons of modernity is that there is no consolation in the human condition, unless perhaps it consists in somehow reconciling ourselves to evils so sublimely absurd that at each new moment they test our capacities for acceptance. In such a world, an understanding of forgiveness – the concept of it, the varieties, its human sources and limits – is more central to life than ever before.”
Allen Wood, Stanford University.
- Parker String Quartet website
- Parker Quartet. Bartók Quartets Nos. 2 & 5. (Zig Zag, 2007.)
- Barbès Bar and Performance Center website
- Yellow Barn Residency
- Caramoor Center for Music and Arts
- Luberon Festival
- Midgette A. Music That Thinks Outside the Chamber. New York Times, 24-JUN-2007. (mentions Parker String Quartet and Chiara String Quartet, performing in bars)
- CMT. Chiara String Quartet Club Scene at The Brick. 16-MAR-2007.
- Bal M. Acts of Memory: Cultural Recall in the Present. Dartmouth College, 1998.
- Boym S. The Future of Nostalgia. Basic, 2002.
- Connerton P. How Societies Remember. Cambridge Univ, 1989.
- Gillies M. Bartók Companion. Hal Leonard, 2003.
- Govier T. Forgiveness and Revenge. Routledge, 2002.
- Griswold C. Forgiveness: A Philosophical Exploration. Cambridge Univ, 2007.
- Gross D. Lost Time: On Remembering and Forgetting in Late Modern Culture. Univ Massachusetts, 2000.
- Halbwachs M. On Collective Memory. Univ Chicago, 1992.
- Huyssen A. Present Pasts: Urban Palimpsests and the Politics of Memory. Stanford Univ, 2003.
- Jankelevitch V. Forgiveness. Univ Chicago, 2005.
- LeGoff J. History and Memory. Columbia Univ, 1996.
- Lowenthal D. The Past Is a Foreign Country. Cambridge Univ, 1988.
- Mahan B, Coles R. Forgetting Ourselves on Purpose: Vocation and the Ethics of Ambition. Jossey-Bass, 2002.
- Murphy J. Getting Even: Forgiveness and Its Limits. Oxford Univ, 2003.
- Murphy J, Hampton J. Forgiveness and Mercy. Cambridge Univ, 1988.
- Price N, Talley M, Vaccaro A, eds. Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage. Getty Trust, 1996.
- Prokofieff S. The Occult Significance of Forgiveness. Temple Lodge, 1996.
- Ricoeur P. Memory, History, Forgetting. Univ Chicago, 2006.
- Schimmel S. Wounds Not Healed by Time: The Power of Repentance and Forgiveness. Oxford Univ, 2002.
- Shriver D. An Ethic for Enemies: Forgiveness in Politics. Oxford Univ, 1995.
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- Weinrich H. Lethe: The Art and Critique of Forgetting. Cornell Univ, 2004.
Long Island Iced Tea
- 3 ounces (100 gm) ice cubes
- 2/3 ounces (20 mL) dry gin
- 2/3 ounces (20 mL) light rum
- 2/3 ounces (20 mL) white tequila
- 2/3 ounces (20 mL) triple sec
- 2/3 ounces (20 mL) vodka
- 3 ounces (10 cL) sour mix
- 3 ounces (10 cL) cola
- 1 dash bitters
- 1 wedge lemon
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