MODLIN ARTS PRESENTS DANISH STRING QUARTET
April 20, 2024 | 7:30 PM
Camp Concert Hall
UNIVERSITY of RICHMOND
MODLIN CENTER FOR THE ARTS
MODLIN ARTS PRESENTS DANISH STRING QUARTET
April 20, 2024 | 7:30 PM
Camp Concert Hall
UNIVERSITY of RICHMOND
MODLIN CENTER FOR THE ARTS
THANKS TO OUR 2023 -2024 MODLIN ARTS PRESENTS SEASON SPONSORS & COMMUNITY PARTNERS
Louis S. Booth Arts Fund
E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation
Cultural Affairs Committee
Department of Music, University of Richmond
Dewitt Fund for the Arts
A. Dale Mayo Fund
Virginia B. Modlin Endowment
Clinton Webb Fund
Norman and Gay Leahy
William and Pamela O’Connor
THIS ENGAGEMENT OF DANISH STRING QUARTET IS MADE POSSIBLE IN PART BY THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF H. Gerald Quigg Arts EndowmentWelcome
At Modlin Center for the Arts, we are committed to providing the University of Richmond campus and our broader community with the best in diverse, thought-provoking, and captivating performances. Each season is cultivated with our attention to showcasing artists who provide insight into our shared humanity. At the University of Richmond, we pledge to you—our patrons and partners, on campus and in our region—that the arts will provide broad access to rich voices, creative passion, and unforgettable experiences.
Modlin is more than our presenting series. We operate as the home for our academic partners within the School of Arts & Sciences, providing spaces for conversation, connection, and collaboration across disciplines. Explore the full range of opportunities from the Department of Music, Department of Theatre & Dance, and University Museums. Don’t miss the extensive calendar of FREE concerts, performances, and exhibits, and make plans to join us.
I hope that you will also consider a contribution to the Modlin Center for the Arts. Your backing is a vital endorsement of the value that Modlin contributes to our cultural landscape. We are deeply grateful to have you include Modlin in your cultural investments. Thank you for being a valued member of our community of the arts.
I look forward to seeing you at Modlin performances in 2023-24 and to hearing what moves you this year!
Paul Brohan, Executive Director P Ticketed: Paid
F Free: Tickets/Registration Required
F Free: No Tickets/Registration Required
Modlin Arts Presents
Department of Theatre and Dance
Department of Music
University Museums
Tucker Boatwright Festival
Queer Pioneers: LGBTQ+ History Through the Photographs of Robert Giard
On view 28 Aug - 8 Dec F
Making Your Mark: Prints and Drawings from the Hechinger Collection
On view 28 Aug - 8 Dec F
Crystals: Minerals from the Collection
On view through 4 May F
Therefore I Am: Portraits from the Joel and Lila Harnett Print Study Center
On view through 30 Jun F
David Esleck Trio
Thu 7 Sep 7:30pm
Marty Stuart
Thu 14 Sep 7:30pm
Volcano Theatre, Book of Life
Sat 23 Sep 7:30pm
We All Break & Leyla McCalla
Thu 28 Sep 7:30pm
Family Weekend Concert
Fri 29 Sep 7:30pm F
Rhiannon Giddens & The Legendary Ingramettes
Sun 1 Oct 7pm P
White Pearl
Thu-Sat 5-7 Oct 7:30pm
Sun 8 Oct 2pm F
Company SBB // Stephanie Batten Bland, Embarqued: Stories of Soil
Fri Oct 6 7:30pm P
The Acting Company, Odyssey
Wed 11 Oct 7:30pm P
Sankai Juku, KŌSA–between two mirrors
Thu 19 Oct 7:30pm P
Davison Plays Davison
Fri 20 Oct 7:30pm
13th Annual Celebration of Dance @ UR!
Sat 21 Oct 7:30pm F
Family Arts Day: Barefoot Puppet Theatre, New Squid on the Block
Sun 22 Oct 1pm-4pm P
Kenny Barron Voyage Trio
Wed 25 Oct 7:30pm P
Inon Barnatan, Alisa Weilerstein & James Ehnes, Swan Song, The Schubert Project
Fri 27 Oct 7:30pm P
Schola Cantorum & Women’s Chorale
Sun 29 Oct 3pm F
ShoutHouse
Fri 3 Nov 7:30pm P
Jazz & Contemporary Combos
Wed 8 Nov 7:30pm F
J’Nai Bridges, Mezzo-Soprano
Thu 9 Nov 7:30pm P
Terence Blanchard, Fire Shut Up in My Bones
Sun 12 Nov 7:30pm P
Sky Hopinka: Masterclass and Film Screening
Mon-Wed 13–15 Nov
Popular Music Ensemble
Tue 14 Nov 7:30pm F
Jazz Ensembles: Little Big Band with Black & White
Wed 15 Nov 7:30pm
Kiara Vigil: Keynote Lecture
Thu 16 Nov 4:30pm F
Fairview
Thu-Sat 16-18 Nov 7:30pm
Sat 18 - Sun 19 Nov 2pm
Global Sounds
Sun 19 Nov 3pm
UR Wind Ensemble
Mon 20 Nov 7:30pm
Canadian Brass, Holiday Show
Wed 29 Nov 7:30pm P
50th Annual Festival of Lessons and Carols
Sun 3 Dec 5pm, 8pm
Chamber Ensembles
Mon 4 Dec 7:30pm
University Symphony Orchestra
Wed 6 Dec 7:30pm F
P Ticketed: Paid
F Free: Tickets/Registration Required
F Free: No Tickets/Registration Required
Modlin Arts Presents
Department of Theatre and Dance
Department of Music
University Museums
Tucker Boatwright Festival
Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton
Marsalis, Max Roach Centennial
Thu 25 Jan 7:30pm P
Richard Becker Piano Concert
Wed 31 Jan 7:30pm F
Hamid Rahmanian, Song of the North
Fri 2 Feb 7:30pm P
Paul Hanson Piano Concert
Sun 4 Feb 3pm F
Layale Chaker & Sarafand, with Kinan Azmeh
Fri 16 Feb 7:30pm P
Emily Riggs, soprano
Sun 18 Feb 3:00
Zuill Bailey, Cello
Wed 28 Feb 7:30pm P
Yiman Wang: Keynote Lecture
Tue 20 Feb 12pm F
Alexa Joubin: Keynote Lecture
Thu 22 Feb 12pm F
MOVING | BODIES BODIES | MOVING University Dancers
39th Annual Concert
Fri-Sat 1-2 Mar 7:30pm
Sun 3 Mar 2pm F
Doris Wylee-Becker Piano Concert
Sun 3 Mar 3pm F
Richmond Piano Trio
Mon 4 Mar 7:30pm F
Martha Graham Dance Company
Fri 22 Mar 7:30pm P
Brad Mehldau, Piano P
Sun 24 Mar 7:30pm
Chris Thile, Mandolin
Wed 27 Mar 7:30pm P
Emanuel Ax, Piano
Fri 5 Apr 7:30pm P
UR Wind Ensemble
Mon 8 Apr 7:30pm F
UR Jazz & Contemporary Combos
Thu 11 Apr 7:30pm F
Natu Camara
Fri 12 Apr 7:30pm P
Schola Cantorum & Women’s Chorale
Sun 14 Apr 3pm
Popular Music Ensemble
Tue 16 Apr 7:30pm F
UR Symphony Orchestra
Wed 17 Apr 7:30pm F
Everybody
18-20 Apr 7:30pm
21 Apr 2pm F
Danish String Quartet
Sat 20 Apr 7:30pm P
Global Sounds
Sun 21 Apr 3pm F
UR Chamber Ensembles
Mon 22 Apr 7:30pm
Cuban Spectacular
Thu 25 Apr 7:30pm
MODLIN CENTER FOR THE ARTS PRESENTS
DANISH STRING QUARTET
PROGRAM
Chaconne in G minor (arr. Britten)
String Quartet in G minor, Op. 20, No. 3
Henry Purcell (1659-1695)
Joseph Haydn
1. Allegro con spirito (1732-1809)
2. Menuet. Allegretto & Trio
3. Poco adagio
4. Allegro molto
String Quartet No. 7 in F Sharp minor, Op. 108
Dmitri Shostakovich
1. Allegretto (1906-1975)
2. Lento
3. Allegro
INTERMISSION
Scandinavian folk music
Danish String Quartet (arr.)
Tonight’s performance will last approximately 1 hour 45 minutes, including intermission.
PHOTO CREDIT: CAROLINE BITTENCOURTA string quartet is a musical genre as well as an instrumental ensemble. While the former continues to evolve as composers explore new structures and sonorities, the latter has changed little since the 18th century. But before the emergence of the modern violin, viola, and cello, their role was filled by the viol. This fretted, typically six-stringed instrument came in a variety of sizes, all of which were held vertically between the knees. Henry Purcell (1659-1695) likely wrote his Chaconne in G Minor for a quartet of viols. One of the most important composers of the English Baroque, Purcell is perhaps best known for his chamber opera Dido and Aeneas. As organist at both Westminster Abbey and the Chapel Royal, he also composed many sacred works. The original context of Purcell’s Chaconne is unknown. Its name refers to a compositional form based on a brief, repeated harmonic progression.
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976), the composer of such 20th-century masterpieces as the War Requiem and the opera Peter Grimes, greatly admired the music of the Baroque era. This affinity found its fullest expression in his Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra, based on a theme from Purcell’s incidental music for the play Abdelazar. Britten originally arranged Purcell’s Chaconne for string orchestra, but its parts are easily adapted to the string quartet. His intention here, as with his other arrangements of Purcell’s compositions, was to make the work appealing to an audience unfamiliar with early music. Among Britten’s interventions are a wider dynamic range and greater equality between the instruments than are found in Purcell’s original setting.
The string quartets of Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) are among the most revered works ever written for this combination of instruments. Early dissemination helped establish their composer as “the father of the string quartet.” The six quartets of Op. 20 date from 1772, when Haydn was Kapellmeister (music director) at the court of Prince Nikolaus Esterházy in Hungary. All six are unusually somber, which some attribute to Haydn’s unhappiness living at the provincial and perpetually swampy Esterházy estate. While the textures and structures of Op. 20 helped establish norms for the nascent genre of the string quartet, the G Minor Quartet, the third of the series, includes some unusual features. Both its first and second movements begin with uncharacteristically asymmetrical phrases, and all four movements conclude quietly. The third movement, marked Adagio, gives unusual attention to the viola, and especially the cello, contributing to greater equality among the four parts. The spirited fourth movement, predominantly in the minor mode, surprises with a G-major cadence in its final bars.
While Haydn’s first published work was a string quartet, Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) did not explore this genre until after completing his fifth symphony. Shostakovich’s String Quartet No. 7 in F-sharp Minor dates from a tumultuous period in his life. Joseph Stalin’s death in 1953 had freed the composer from the looming threat of his most powerful
critic, but just a few years later he lost both his wife and his mother, and then his second marriage failed. Shostakovich composed this, his shortest string quartet, in 1960, to memorialize his first wife. The work exhibits a high degree of thematic unity. Its first movement contrasts descending and ascending motives with nervous repeated notes. The ghostly second movement follows immediately, its thin texture further reduced through extended octave doubling of the viola and cello. The third movement is actually two movements fused together: a furious Allegro with a brief fugue based on a motive from the second movement gives way to a waltzlike Allegretto that recalls a melody from the first.
- Dr. Linda Fairtile, Head Music Librarian
Parsons Music Library, University of Richmond
The Danish String Quartet celebrates its 20th Anniversary in 2022-23, and the GRAMMY®-nominated quartet continues to assert its preeminence among the world’s finest string quartets. Formed when they were in their teens, they are renowned for impeccable musicianship, sophisticated artistry, exquisite clarity of ensemble, and, above all, and an unmatched ability to play as one. Performances are characterized by a rare musical spontaneity, giving audiences the sense of hearing even treasured canon repertoire as if for the first time. They exude a palpable joy in musicmaking that has made them one of today’s most highly acclaimed and in-demand classical quartets, performing sold-out concert halls around the world. Their inventive and intriguing programming and repertoire choices have produced critically acclaimed original projects and commissions as well as popular arrangements of Scandinavian folk music.
This season, the Danish String Quartet continues its DOPPELGÄNGER series, an ambitious four-year international commissioning project.
DOPPELGÄNGER pairs world premieres from four renowned composers— Bent Sørensen, Lotta Wennäkoski, Anna Thorvaldsdottir, and Thomas Adès—with late major chamber works by Schubert. Each season, the Quartet performs a world premiere on a program with its doppelgänger— the Schubert quartet or quintet that inspired it—culminating in 2024 in the premiere of a quintet by Adès, after the String Quintet in C major. This season’s new work, by Anna Thorvaldsdottir, premieres in April 2023 and is paired with Schubert’s String Quartet in A Minor, “Rosamunde.” The DOPPELGÄNGER pieces are commissioned by the Danish String Quartet with the support of Carnegie Hall, Cal Performances, UC Santa Barbara Arts & Lectures, Vancouver Recital Society, Flagey in Brussels, and Muziekgebouw in Amsterdam. The Quartet performs 28 concerts in North American this season over the course of three separate tours. Additionally, they are Artist in Residence at London’s Wigmore Hall.
The Danish String Quartet’s most recent recording project is PRISM, a series of five discs on ECM New Series that explores the symbiotic musical and contextual relationships between Bach fugues, Beethoven string quartets, and works by Shostakovich, Schnittke, Bartok, Mendelssohn, and Webern. Four of the five recordings have been released on ECM, and the fifth, PRISM V, is slated for 2023. The most recently released is PRISM IV (2022), which was an “Editor’s Choice” in Limelight magazine. The Quartet’s discography reflects the ensemble’s special affinity for Scandinavian composers, with the complete quartets of Carl Nielsen (DaCapo, 2007 and 2008) and Adès, Nørgård & Abrahamsen, their debut on ECM in 2016. They also released two
discs of traditional Scandinavian folk music, Wood Works (Dacapo, 2014) and Last Leaf (ECM, 20127), which was one of the top classical albums of the year, as chosen by NPR, Spotify and The New York Times, among others. A third folk recording is planned for release in 2023 on ECM. The Quartet takes an active role in reaching new audiences through special projects. In 2007, they established the DSQ Festival, which takes place in intimate and informal settings in Copenhagen. In 2016, they inaugurated a concert series, Series of Four, in which they both perform and invite colleagues to appear.
They are the recipients of many awards and prestigious appointments, including Musical America’s 2020 Ensemble of the Year and the BorlettiBuitoni Trust. The Quartet was named in 2013 as BBC Radio 3 New Generation Artists and appointed to The Bowers Program (formerly CMS Two). The Quartet was the awarded the 2010 NORDMETALL-Ensemble Prize at the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Festival in Germany, and in 2011, they received the Carl Nielsen Prize, the highest cultural honor in Denmark.
Violinists Frederik Øland and Rune Tonsgaard Sørenson and violist Asbjørn Nørgaard met as children at a music summer camp where they played soccer and made music together. As teenagers, they began the study of classical chamber music and were mentored by Tim Frederiksen of Copenhagen’s Royal Danish Academy of Music. In 2008, the three Danes were joined by Norwegian cellist Fredrik Schøyen Sjölin. Learn more at www.danishquartet.com.
PHOTO CREDIT: CAROLINE BITTENCOURTSOLD OUT STAY TUNED FOR DIGITAL SNEAK PEEKS, OUR SEASON ANNOUNCEMENT, AND TICKET AVAILABILITY!
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