THE IVES QUARTET Presents
Dvorak, Piano Quintet in A Major, Op. 81
PAUL
HERSH, pianist
Quincy Porter, Quartet
No. 3
Beethoven, Quartet C minor, Op. 18, #4
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Please
contact: March 26, 2007
Pam
Lampkin, Administrative Director
(650)
224-7849 pkinx2@aol.com
Palo Alto, CA – Inspired by the passionate, artistic commitment
of American composer Charles Ives (1874-1954), the Ives Quartet provides
powerful musical experiences by presenting fresh and informed interpretations
of a carefully curated repertory to San Francisco Bay Area, American
and international audiences.
The Ives Quartet, Spring Concert Series features pianist Paul
Hersh, who joins the Ives in the Dvorak Piano Quintet, Op. 81. Over
the years, the Ives has treasured its collaborations with Mr. Hersh,
both as a violist and as a pianist. He has made a particular impression
on Peninsula audiences and students through his many years of performances
and mentoring with the Palo Alto Chamber Orchestra.
Mr. Hersh attended Yale and studied viola with William Primrose and
piano with Leonard Shure and Edward Steuermann. From 1961-1971, he
was violist and pianist of the Lenox Quartet. He made his piano debut
at Carnegie Recital Hall in 1964. He is currently Professor of Piano,
Viola, Chamber Music and Literature at the San Francisco Conservatory
of Music.
In keeping with their commitment to a vibrant,
living repertoire, the Ives’ Spring Concert Series will introduce Quincy
Porter’s Third String Quartet, which, along
with Quartets 1, 2, and 4, is scheduled for release on the
Naxos Classical Music label in July 2007. This marks the first time
the Porter quartets have been recorded.
Jodi Levitz, violist, joined the Quartet in September
2006 and first played with the Ives in this soon to be released
recording. In fact, it was Jodi who went to the Yale University
music library to find the scores and parts to the first and second
quartets, now out of print. The work was first recommended to second
violinist Susan Freier and her former quartet, the Chester, by
the great violinist/teacher Joseph Gingold. Like the quartet's
namesake, Charles Ives, Porter was a Connecticut native. Porter
taught at Ives' alma mater, Yale University, a generation after
Ives graduated. If much of Ives' music reflects everyday life in
the rural New England of his day, Porter's Third Quartet is inspired
by the jazz and American urban bustle of the 1930s.
Porter was a very accomplished violist and enjoyed his quartet work
immensely. This must account for the works that span his entire creative
life - nine quartets, a pair of quintets and numerous other chamber
works. The Third Quartet has a particularly luscious viola part; it
is a great way to continue to introduce Ives Quartet violist, Jodi
Levitz, to our audience!
Rhythmic dance qualities are the unifying element
of the Ives’ spring
series program. The last movement of the Porter is a fandango,
the Dvorak's Czech rhythms, particularly in it's Dumka and Scherzo
movements, and the Hungarian style of the last movement of the
Beethoven give all of the pieces immediately irresistible and visceral
rhythmic drive.
The Ives Quartet combines the talent and experience
of the international, solo, orchestral, chamber, and recording
careers of its artist members – Bettina
Mussumeli, violin; Susan
Freier, violin; Jodi
Levitz, viola; and Stephen
Harrison, cello. Each player is an acclaimed performer on his/her
instrument, earning distinction with other renowned chamber music ensembles,
including the Chester and Stanford Quartets, I Solisti Veneti, the
Chicago String Trio, and the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players.
The unique perspective of the Quartet, reflecting the unusual and varied
backgrounds of the its members, graces San Francisco Bay Area stages
during its home season and the concert halls and festival stages of
Europe during the summer.
Spring Concert Series Information
Friday, May 11, 2007, 8pm
St. Mark's Episcopal Church,
600 Colorado Avenue, Palo Alto
Saturday, May 12, 2007, 8pm
Le Petit Trianon Theatre,
72 North 5th Street, San Jose
TICKETS: $25 (general), $20 (seniors) $15 (students)
at the door.
Children 12 and under FREE.
Online information (http://ivesquartet.org),
or 224-7849
COLOR & B/W JPG ART
AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST