Friday, November 19, 2021

Concert Review: Alda Dizdari and Maria Gîlicel, violins / Mellos Ensemble (Southwark International Music Festival)

The opening concert in any new music festival with aspirations to become an annual event needs to immediately create an impression and, hopefully, carry with it the portent of great things to come. By launching with a programme entitled ‘Genius’ the Southwark International Music Festival, brainchild of violinist Alda Dizdari during lockdown last year, sought to do just that by finding synchronicity of purpose with the three works played by the Mellos Ensemble.

Each of the composers featured – Bach, Elgar and Enescu – wrote their pieces at a time in their lives when they had not yet achieved the fame that would eventually make their reputations. Another thread of performance connects these composers: Enescu, himself a fabulous violinist, recorded Bach’s double concerto with Yehudi Menuhin. It was also with Enescu that Menuhin prepared Elgar’s violin concerto for the famous recording of the work, conducted by the composer.

The flexibility of the Mellos Ensemble’s constitution – a core of members is supplemented to accommodate the performance of larger-scale works – was shown to good advantage throughout the concert. Alda Dizdari provided discrete yet assured direction in her role as ensemble leader. In Bach’s Concerto in D Minor for Two Violins, BWV 1043, she played the first solo violin part, whilst Maria Gîlicel played the second solo part.

The opening Vivace movement was well articulated with a sense of ensemble proportion, whilst the solo parts were distinct and characterful. In the middle movement, Largo ma non tanto, an apt tempo was taken without ever becoming ponderous. This allowed for a sense of reflection, which enabled the sinuous interplay of the reversed solo lines to fully register. Maria Gîlicel’s mellower tone contrasted well against the brighter timbre of Alda Dizdari’s playing, which benefitted the concerto as a whole. The closing Allegro movement’s lively intricacies were enjoyed by the ensemble and soloists alike, revealing much of interest in Bach’s inventive writing.

Edward Elgar’s youthful and slender Serenade for Strings in E Minor, Op.20, followed. The Serenade for Strings was written in 1892. A compact work consisting of three relatively brief movements, it was a revision and reworking of earlier material.

The opening Allegro piacevole, literally a ‘pleasing’ Allegro, was played with a buoyant tempo and warmth of tone, so much so that the impression of an English idyll came readily to mind. This was continued by the middle movement Larghetto, in which foreshadowings of Nimrod from the ‘Enigma’ Variations were readily detectable. A most sensitive blending of timbres was expertly handled, and nowhere more so than the movement’s closing diminuendo passages. This fully captured the romance in Elgar’s heart-on-sleeve writing. The final Allegretto movement captured the feeling of a pastorale, as the ensemble conveying a sense of unified contentment in their generous yet unforced articulation of this brief yet tender moment of Elgarian repose.

The evening concluded with a performance of George Enescu’s mighty String Octet in C Major, Op.7. Sometimes performed with a conductor, given its intricacy, it says a great deal that the Mellos Ensemble tackled it without one. The Octet’s four connected movements work together to form a large-scale sonata form across its entire structure. Something of the effort that Enescu grappled with is evident in any performance, as motifs and ideas recur between the movements. The Mellos Ensemble did not shy away from its challenges in their performance.

The first movement, Très modéré, was begun just a touch of hesitancy, but progressed to find a requisite driving rhythm. Individual lines were clearly articulated, and interest was maintained across Enescu’s wide canvas through variety of tone, timbre and articulation. If at times the violins occasionally were prominent, the violas and cellos also had their passages of importance; these duly registered without taking away from the whole. The monumentally fugal second movement was greatly enlivened by the incisive attack afforded it in this performance. There was also elegance in its playing and discretion in playing individual lines, which contribute threads towards the completion of a tapestry. The third movement, Lentement, which takes the form of a meditative and even nostalgic nocturne, held the attention through playing that was confident and shaded at times with great depth of feeling. The Octet’s closing movement, a rhythmic waltz, was high-spirited. That the entire Mellos Ensemble clearly had this music comfortably under their fingers, as it were, aided their fully committed realisation of Enescu’s youthful vision for this work, which he claimed was the one with which he attained his own compositional voice. Playing of this calibre left me wondering anew why Enescu’s Octet is not better known, even today.

The concert was met with an enthusastic reception by the in-person audience at Sands Films Music Room, and I assume, the audience watching at home via the livestream. Over the past two years, it has been a necessity to often enjoy music-making online, often with variable sound quality. There were no such issues here though, thankfully. Hybrid audience concerts could well be a format of choice going forward, since it opens up events to a truly global audience.

Three further concerts are scheduled within the Southwark International Music Festival during the next week – details and booking online at https://southwarkmusic.org.uk/festival/. Having enjoyed watching this concert via an online livestream from Sands Films Music Room, it is good to see that one other concert in this years’ series is also being livestreamed, which you can watch free of charge. I urge you to investigate and support if you can – it is only through support that ventures like this will establish themselves, backed by funding and professional organisation, so the musicians and performances can receive the recognition they truly deserve. A credit to all involved; more please!

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