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SEEN AND HEARD UK CONCERT REVIEW
Schumann - Pieces from Album für die Jugend, op.68, interspersed with:
Holliger - Duöli (2008/2010)
Holliger - Præludium, Arioso, and Passacaglia, for solo harp (1987)
Berg - Chamber Concerto
        This was the second of two concerts, curated by Christoph Richter, 
        welcoming Heinz Holliger to Kings Place. We did not hear him as oboist, 
        but we heard him both as composer and as conductor - as well as lecturer 
        in a pre-concert analytical talk on Berg's Chamber Concerto. The first 
        concert had been entitled 'Fantasies and Journeys', offering music by 
        Sandor Veress, Schumann, Holliger, and Kurtág. I wondered whether the 
        second, 'Childhood and Encryptions,' might have made more sense in the 
        context of having heard the first. As it was, 'childhood' inhabited the 
        first half, and 'encryptions' the second; it was not always clear what 
        connected the two.
        
        However, there was much to enjoy. Alexander Lonquich offered an 
        excellent selection from Schumann's Album für die Jugend, both 
        precise and Classically alluring of tone; I should have been happy to 
        have heard more, and suspect that I cannot have been the only audience 
        member taken back to my own childhood assaults on Schumann's exquisite 
        miniatures. It was interesting to hear interspersed with the Schumann 
        pieces Holliger's Duöli, the work's title given in his native 
        Swiss German, as were those of the individual pieces. Whether one would 
        wish, outside a Holliger series, to hear all of these violin 'duos' 
        (confusingly, they occasionally involve three or four players) is 
        another question. I am sure they work very well as teaching pieces, 
        rather like Bartók's Mikrokosmos, to which they sometimes sound 
        close in language. There is humour, whether in the titles - for 
        instance, 'It is really not so difficult,' or 'Two Little Pieces that do 
        not quite fit together' - or in the additional noises (cat-song, the 
        canon for two or three snorers) that the instrumentalists are sometimes 
        called upon to provide. Moreover, there are moments of considerable 
        beauty; for instance the droplet music, which sounds as one might 
        expect, or the occasional ventures into Nono-like near-inaudibility. 
        There are also instances of a somewhat soft-centred version of 
        Lachenmann-like re-examination of the violin's possibilities, though 
        without Lachenmann's intensity. It was encouraging to note that two 
        young violinists from the Junior Guildhall, Alexander Harris and Curtis 
        Wilkinson, stood up perfectly well in comparison with their professional 
        colleagues, Muriel Cantoreggi and Florence Cooke. Nevertheless, a 
        selection might prove a better way to programme the pieces, for a 
        certain monotony, compositional variety notwithstanding, sets in. 
        
        Holliger's wife, Ursula, opened the second half with the Præludium, 
        Arioso, and Passacaglia. The piece is dedicated 'for Ursula for 8.6 
        and 7.7'. We are not informed what these numbers signify, but are told 
        that they form a structural role in the music as a whole. (I am afraid I 
        should need to be informed how…) Whatever the meaning of these 
        encryptions, it is a fine addition to the solo harp repertoire, 
        combining neo-Baroque form, or at least an echo thereof, with decidedly 
        twentieth-century style. Ursula Holliger was clearly in command 
        throughout. 
        
        Finally - and this was what I had been waiting for - came a splendid 
        performance of Berg's Chamber Concerto. Holliger has good form in Berg: 
        I highly commend his recording of the Violin Concerto with Thomas 
        Zehetmair. Having heard a detailed description of the various 
        encryptions in the earlier lecture, it was all the easier to receive the 
        work as much as a dramatic exploration of various Romantic 'characters' 
        - Berg, Schoenberg, Webern, Rudolf Kolisch, and so on - and their 
        interaction. The performances were certainly impressive, woodwind 
        players from the Royal Academy of Music proving full of drive and 
        character. One could truly relish their engagement with the score - and 
        doubtless with the conductor too. Lonquich proved an estimable pianist, 
        finely balancing post-Romantic expressive considerations with complexity 
        and structure. Cantoreggi played the violin part; initially she sounded 
        somewhat disconnected, taking a little while to get into her stride, but 
        when she did, she proved impassioned indeed. Holliger's overall command 
        of Berg's form was as clear as his attentiveness to detail. I have never 
        understood why some people claim to love Berg's music yet to be put off 
        by this work. In its marriage of labyrinthine complexity and 
        hyper-expressivity it could hardly be more typical of the composer. A 
        very good performance such as this, or the
        
        outstanding West-Eastern Divan Orchestra performance at the 2009 Proms
        , ought to convince any remaining doubters. It was interesting, 
        moreover, to note how different the work sounds in a small hall: much 
        more 'concerto', much less 'chamber'. 
        
        Mark Berry 
      
