Roeland Hendrikx
Roeland Hendrikx Ensemble | A JOURNEY TO MANNHEIM, BUDAPEST AND KRAKAU
Tue, 29 Apr
|Aartselaar (Sint Leonarduskerk)
Clarinet and String Trio. Works by Mozart, Hummel, Penderecki and Kokai
29 Apr 2025, 20:00
Aartselaar (Sint Leonarduskerk), Laar 25/29, 2630 Aartselaar, Belgium
Info
Roeland Hendrikx Ensemble
A JOURNEY TO MANNHEIM, BUDAPEST AND KRAKAU
Nicolas Dupont, violin
Sander Geerts, viola
Sébastien Walnier, cello
Roeland Hendrikx, clarinet
Program
W.A. Mozart | Flute Quartet KV 285 (arr)
J.N. Hummel | Clarinet Quartet
R. Kokai | Quartettino (1952) C. Penderecki | Quartet(1993)
Goethe once said that the string quartet was his favorite of all instrumental music: "one hears four intelligent people entertaining themselves with each other, and believes to understand something of their conversation." Goethe may have been talking about the string quartet, but you will find exactly the samething about the clarinet quartet after this concert. Only: we have to travel for that.
We begin with works by Mozart. Today we "borrow" an older quartet that Wolfie had actually written for amateur flutist Ferdinand de Jean, whom he had met in the entourage of the Mannheim Orchestra. For this theft we need not be harshly ashamed, for Mozart declared after failing to pay that he "had to stop writing for instruments he could not actually like."
Mozart passed on his talent for quartet composition to his pupil Johann NepomukHummel (1778-1837), who succeeded Haydn as Kapellmeister at the Esterházy's in Eisenstadt, on the border of Austria and Hungary. Hummel conceived Mozart in 1808 with a beautiful, highly idiosyncratic Clarinet Quartet. It is sometimes said of Hummel that he applied the subjective, the passionate, and the excessive of Romanticism to his own music some 20 years before that term came into vogue. The dramatic and surprising Clarinet Quartet is clearly a bridging work between Classicism and Romanticism, and the first movement audibly contains traces of Hummel's sometimes warm, sometimes chilly relationship with Beethoven: Hummel audibly quotes Beethoven's Eroïca, but it is not clear whether this was done out of respect, or with a parodying intent....
With Hungarian Rezső Kókai(1906-1962), we enter the 20th century, and end up in Budapest. Kókai was a (film) composer, professor of musicology, and music director of Hungarian national radio. His Quartettino(1952) for clarinet, violin, viola and cello is a jewel of neoclassical intimacy: in form it tastes of Stamitz, Mozart and Hummel, but in atmosphere it exudes Slavic rhapsodic melancholy in every phrase.
We end this trip in Krakow. Penderecki's 1993 Clarinet Quartet is rightly considered a high point in chamber music (by Penderecki). Although the entire work exudes nostalgia and Weltschmerz, the first three movements really only prepare for the imposing lament in Abschied. That final movement is a meditation on the Adagio from Schubert's String Quintet, but also a startling musical foreshadowing of the afterlife: it ends in a long, low pedal tone on the cello, which serves as the foundation for a rarefied, ethereal violin melody in the highest register.