oneppo chamber music series
David Shifrin, artistic director
oneppo chamber music series
David Shifrin, artistic director
Tuesday, March 5, 2024 | 7:30 pm
Morse Recital Hall in Sprague Memorial Hall
José García-León, Dean
Johann Friedrich Fasch
1688–1758
Pietro Antonio Locatelli
1695–1764
Antonio Vivaldi
1678–1741
Marin Marais
1656–1728
Overture in D minor, FaWV K:d4
Concerto grosso in C minor, Op. 1, No. 11
Largo – Allemande. Allegro – Sarabanda. Largo –Allegro
Concerto for bassoon in B-flat major, RV 501, “La Notte”
Largo/Fantasmi (Ghosts) – Il Sonno (Sleep) –Sorge l’Aurora (The dawn rises)
Dominic Teresi, bassoon
Chaconne from Alcyone (1706)
Georg Philipp Telemann
1681–1767
Johann Sebastian Bach 1685–1750
Jean-Joseph de Mondonville 1711–1772
Orchestral Suite in B-flat major
Ouverture – Bourrée – Plainte – Rondeau –Sarabande – Gigue
Concerto for 2 violins in D minor, BWV 1043
Vivace – Largo ma non tanto – Allegro
Aisslinn Nosky & Johanna Novom, violin
Sonate en symphonie in G minor, Op. 3, No. 1
Overtura – Gratioso – Giga
We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts.
As a courtesy to others, please silence all devices. Photography and recording of any kind is strictly prohibited. Please do not leave the hall during musical selections. Thank you.
Aisslinn Nosky, violin I
Patricia Ahern, violin I
Christopher Verrette, violin I
Cristina Zacharias, violin I
Johanna Novom, violin II
Valerie Gordon, violin II
Julia Wedman, violin II
Patrick G. Jordan, viola
Brandon Chui, viola
Keiran Campbell, violoncello
Michael Unterman, violoncello
Pippa Macmillan, double bass
John Abberger, oboe
Kathryn Montoya, oboe
Dominic Teresi, bassoon
Jeffrey Grossman, harpsichord
The dynamic Canadian violinist Aisslinn Nosky has captivated audiences around the world. Her fierce passion for early music and skill as a soloist and director have generated robust appreciation. Hailed as “superb” by the New York Times and “a fearsomely powerful musician” by the Toronto Star, widespread demand for Nosky continues to grow.
Nosky was appointed concertmaster of the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston in 2011. She has also appeared as guest director and soloist with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, New Zealand Symphony Orchestra, Holland Baroque, Portland Baroque Orchestra, and Juilliard 415. She was a member of Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra from 2005 to 2016. She
served as principal guest conductor of the Niagara Symphony from 2016 to 2019, and was guest artist-in-residence of the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra.
Nosky has recorded the complete Haydn and Mozart violin concertos with the Handel and Haydn Society.
» aisslinn.com
Tafelmusik
Every now and then a group of musicians comes along and changes the way we think about music. For over four decades, Tafelmusik has been synonymous worldwide with dynamic, engaging, and soulful performances informed by scholarship, passion, and artistic excellence. Performing on instruments and in styles appropriate to the era, Tafelmusik has performed in more than 350 cities in 32 countries. Its extensive discography on the Sony, CBC Records, Analekta, and Tafelmusik Media labels has garnered ten JUNOs and numerous international recording prizes. From a vibrant home season in Toronto, to international tours, awardwinning recordings, and inspiring education programs, Tafelmusik is a musical powerhouse with a reputation for thrilling and delighting audiences.
Tafelmusik artistic co-directors: Brandon Chui, Dominic Teresi, Cristina Zacharias
» tafelmusik.org
Overture in D minor fasch
The organist and violinist Johann Friedrich Fasch was descended from a long line of Lutheran cantors and theologians. He studied at the Thomasschule in Leipzig and with Christoph Graupner in Darmstadt before taking up the position of court Kapellmeister in Zerbst. He remained in Zerbst until his death in 1758, but his reputation as a composer was widespread: his works were performed by Telemann in Hamburg, Bach in Leipzig, Pisendel in Dresden, and C. P. E. Bach in Berlin. He continued to send copies of his compositions to his former teacher Graupner in Darmstadt, and the library there includes a wealth of his instrumental works, including the Overture that opens this program.
Concerto grosso in C minor locatelli
The virtuoso violinist Pietro Antonio Locatelli’s playing was said to run the gamut from “such fury as to wear out dozens of violins in a year,” to a sweetness and delicacy which would “make a canary fall off of his perch in a swoon of pleasure!” His three sets of orchestral concerti grossi reveal his compositional skills. They are beautifully crafted, harmonically rich, rhythmically inventive, texturally varied works modelled after Arcangelo Corelli’s celebrated Opus 6 concerti. One contemporary praised Locatelli for the novelty of his ideas, the sublimity of the themes, and the naturalness of his melodies, qualities
which are well demonstrated in the C-minor concerto from his Opus 1 collection of twelve concertos, published in 1721.
Concerto for bassoon in B-flat major, “La Notte”
vivaldi
Antonio Vivaldi’s descriptive concerto “La Notte” (The Night) exists in three versions: one scored for flute, bassoon, and strings; a similar version for flute without bassoon; and a quite different piece for solo bassoon and strings.
Vivaldi’s ability to “paint” vivid pictures with a relatively small musical palette, made famous in The Four Seasons, is plainly evident in all three versions. Vivaldi’s night has a sinister beginning, interrupted by a flurry of ghostly spirits (Fantasmi). Sleep (Il Sonno) finally descends, and we follow the bassoonist through a mesmerizing dreamscape. In the final movement, daybreak finds the soloist rousing the strings from drowsy sleep, though not without a few resets of the “snooze” button on the orchestra’s part.
Marin Marais was one of Louis XIV’s most renowned instrumentalists, a virtuoso of the viola da gamba. In addition to his positions as a chamber musician, Marais was also a member of the opera orchestra of the Académie Royale de Musique and studied opera composition with Lully. This led to the composition of five operas for production at court. Alcyone, first performed
in 1706, was the most popular, and was staged as late as 1771. Its glorious Chaconne has been a favorite of Tafelmusik since we first performed it over 40 years ago.
Orchestral Suite in B-flat major telemann
Included in the vast catalogue of Telemann’s output are some 135 orchestral suites for various combinations of instruments, from strings only to full orchestra with trumpets and timpani. One of his favorite choices matches the scoring of the Tafelmusik core orchestra: two oboes, bassoon, strings, and continuo. Aisslinn Nosky has assembled an engaging selection of movements from three of Telemann’s suites for this orchestration. The dynamic opening Ouverture is followed by a sequence of lively dance movements. As is so often the case with Telemann, the winds are featured prominently throughout. The poignant Plainte, featuring solo oboe and violin, is an exquisite centerpiece.
Concerto for 2 violins in D minor bach
The violin was one of Bach’s favored solo instruments: he turned to the violin as a counterpart to the solo voice in countless arias in his sacred works, and of course composed the remarkable sonatas and partitas for unaccompanied violin, works that remain at the very core of the violin repertoire three centuries later. Although primarily a keyboard player, Bach was also a capable violinist and violist, and he fully understood that the violin could be
played on the one hand with great energy and virtuosity, and on the other with the most sublime and tender expression. This is evident in the contrasting movements of his concertos for solo violin, and especially in the Concerto for 2 violins in D minor, which has long been a favorite of violinists and audiences alike.
Sonate en symphonie No. 1 in G minor mondonville
The French violinist Jean-Joseph Cassanéa de Mondonville was born in Narbonne, settling in Paris as a young man and quickly rising to prominence as one of the city’s leading performers and composers. His 1734 publication of six Pièces de clavecin en sonates (Harpsichord pieces as sonatas), Op. 3, was particularly well received. The title refers to their scoring for harpsichord and violin, both parts equally elaborate, and as such an unusual melding of a solo harpsichord piece and a violin sonata. He later transcribed all six for a full ensemble, to be performed at the Concert Spirituel, a popular concert series in Paris. We end the program with the orchestral version of the colorful and vivacious first sonata and are grateful to Patrick G. Jordan for adding the missing viola part to complete the score.
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List as of February 28, 2024
mar 6 Lunchtime Chamber Music
12:30 p.m. | Morse Recital Hall
Free admission
mar 7 David Sanford, guest composer New Music New Haven
7:30 p.m. | Morse Recital Hall
Free admission
mar 8 Yale Voxtet: Italia und Germania Institute of Sacred Music
7:30 p.m. | Marquand Chapel
Free admission
mar 26
Vista: Chamber Music YSM Ensembles
7:30 p.m. | Morse Recital Hall
Free admission
mar 27 Boris Slutsky, piano, & Eric Zuber, piano Horowitz Piano Series
7:30 p.m. | Morse Recital Hall
Tickets start at $17, Yale faculty/staff start at $12, Students start at $8
apr 3
Lunchtime Chamber Music
12:30 p.m. | Morse Recital Hall
Free admission
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