11:20 AM CDT on Friday, July 10, 2009
By SCOTT CANTRELL / The Dallas Morning News
scantrell@dallasnews.com
FORT WORTH – The Mimir Chamber Music Festival amazed again Thursday evening.
In its 12th year, the Texas Christian University festival is both a summer course for college-age instrumentalists and a concert series. Doubling as faculty members and performers are musicians drawn from the Chicago Symphony and Cleveland orchestras, the TCU faculty and elsewhere. But the concerts, at PepsiCo Recital Hall, always include some of the year's best chamber-music performances.
Thursday's account of Beethoven's B-flat major Quartet (Op. 18, No. 6) was as bracing as a dip in a cold stream. Violinists Nathan Cole and Stephen Rose, violist Kirsten Docter and cellist Brant Taylor whipped up that restless energy that seems so quintessentially Beethovenian, and they relished the scherzo's sheer mischief.
Tonal finesse was never in doubt; even fortissimos were never forced or raw. Unisons and octaves were tuned with uncanny accuracy. Cole, in particular, made vibrato a genuinely expressive device, deployed in apparently limitless nuances.
Beethoven's Third Razumovsky Quartet got a performance of matching sophistication. Here Cole and Rose switched places, Rose delivering the first-violin part with the polish and elegance you expect only on a heavily edited recording. And you'd be hard-pressed to match Docter and Taylor for finely honed contributions in the lower parts. The foursome maybe rushed their hurdles too much in the finale, taken at a hair-raising tempo, but the fury was coordinated with amazing precision.
The Dvorák A major Piano Quintet wasn't the justly beloved one that's such a staple of the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. No, this was Op. 5, composed 15 years earlier. Dvorák was in his 30s by then, but he was something of a late bloomer. This is still juvenilia, uninspired ideas unimaginatively developed.
Pianist Alessio Bax and violinist Curt Thompson joined Rose, Docter and Taylor in a dedicated performance. Bax might have helped with more shape in the piano part. Or not.
The Mimir Chamber Music Festival continues with concerts at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Tuesday and July 17 and 3 p.m. Sunday. at PepsiCo Recital Hall, University Drive and Cantey Street, Fort Worth. (But be warned that Interstate 30 will be reduced to one lane each way in Arlington for most of the weekend.) $25; discounts for seniors, students. 817-257-5443, www.mimirfestival.org. Read more!