The Met Orchestra Chamber Ensemble
Part of: Spotlight on the Year of Czech Music
Performers
The Met Orchestra Chamber Ensemble
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Conductor
Program
MARTINŮ Nonet, H. 374
JANÁČEK String Quartet No. 1, "Kreutzer Sonata"
DVOŘÁK Serenade for Strings
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately 90 minutes, including one 20-minute intermission.Salon Encores
Join us for a free drink at a post-concert reception in Weill Recital Hall’s Jacobs Room.
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Year of Czech Music
Carnegie Hall joins music lovers around the world for the 2024 Year of Czech Music, a decennial celebration that highlights legendary Czech composers.
Anyone who wants to posit the existence of a “Czech style” would be challenged by the aesthetic differences among the three extraordinary works on tonight’s program. Martinů’s Nonet No. 2, written in the last year of his life, is a work of unusual expansiveness. The opening section of the piece features a staggering 10 different themes, ranging from folk stylizations to darkly chromatic passages, culminating in a glorious horn solo. Martinů’s intuitive genius ensures that we do not even notice the vast difference in stylistic material. The work is filled with surprises: The finale begins as a work of unrepentant modernism and ends with a charming hymn. On the other hand, Janáček’s String Quartet No. 1 is a work of maximum concentration and intricate motivic work lasting less than 20 minutes. Based loosely on episodes from Tolstoy’s Kreutzer Sonata (itself referring to Beethoven’s great sonata) and derived in part from an earlier piano trio, it bristles with passionate interruptions.
Dvořák’s beloved Serenade for Strings delivers a pastoral atmosphere and romance in abundance. The charming opening sets the stage with its calm lyricism, followed by a memorable waltz. The slow movement unfolds languorously (and was later used by film composer Nino Rota as the model for “Gelsomina” in his score for Fellini’s La Strada). The final movement features one of Dvořák’s “flashbacks,” in which material from earlier movements—including the beginning of the first movement—reappears near the conclusion.
—Michael Beckerman