Home  Reviews  Articles  Calendar  Presenters  Add Event     
Choral and Vocal
MERCURY IN FLIGHT
by Pamela Hick Gailey
Saturday, October 5, 2024
Choral and Vocal
SPARKLING ART SONG AND PIANO SOLO RECITAL AT THE 222 GALLERY
by Pamela Hick Gailey
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Symphony
MOZART THE SUBLIME IN UKIAH SYMPHONY'S CONCERT
by Terry McNeill
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Symphony
POTENT TCHAIKOVSKY INTERPRETATION IN PHILHARMONIC'S 25TH ANNIVERSARY OPENER
by Terry McNeill
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Recital
SPANISH MUSIC AT SPRING LAKE VILLAGE
by Terry McNeill
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Chamber
BRASS OVER BRIDGES AT SPRING LAKE SERIES
by Terry McNeill
Wednesday, August 21, 2024
CALLEJA AND SANIKIDZE CHARGE THE ATMOSPHERE IN WEILL WITH SUMMER FAVORITES
by Pamela Hicks Gailey
Saturday, August 3, 2024
ENERGETIC SINGING IN CALLEJA/SANIKIDZE WEILL RECITAL
by Mark Kratz
Saturday, August 3, 2024
MUSICAL CALM IN A WORLD OF POLITICAL IDIOTS
by Terry McNeill
Friday, August 2, 2024
Chamber
SUNBEAMS ON THE FESTIVAL DEL SOLE FROM THE FAR NORTH
by Terry McNeill
Thursday, August 1, 2024
CHAMBER REVIEW
The 222 / Friday, March 1, 2024
Fry Street Quartet. Robert Waters and Rebecca McFoul, violin; Bradley Ottesen, viola; Anne Francis Bayless, cello

Fry St. SQ March 1 at the 222

FRY ST. SQ PLAYS A DEMANDING 222 GALLERY CONCERT

by Terry McNeill
Friday, March 1, 2024

Continuing a string of exemplary chamber music programs, Healdsburg’s 222 Gallery presented Utah-based Fry Street Quartet March 1 over two evenings that included a movie, two demanding quartets and a newly minted work by a local composer.

Newly minted? Gabriela Lena Frank’s A Psalm of Disquiet was commissioned and premiered by the Fry in November, and the composer was slated to be present for this performance before 70 attendees. The rainstorm and road closures in nearby Anderson Valley prevented the composer’s appearance, but the Fry forged ahead with an idiomatic and powerful reading of the 16-minute piece.

The music had similarities with the pungent movie background score of the previous event but had a more cogent architecture and instrumental contrasts – slashing bows; strong tremolos, languorous lines; sounds of grunts, whines, pops, snarls. The sharp contrasts often faded into lovely quiet sections with hints of themes, but the playing never rambled and was surely not stream-of-consciousness. Bradley Ottesen’s extended viola solo was a voice in the wild.

Opening the concert was a brisk 26-minute performance of Beethoven’s F Major Quartet, Op. 135, from 1826. Acoustics were immediately on display with heavy rain hitting the two high vaulted gallery roofs and heater fans adding a wispy sound, but happily the string sound was direct without much reverberation. Playing in the opening Allegretto had the requisite charm, and led wonderfully into vivace with rough repeated figures, and then the peaceful beauty of the Lento Assai with nimble decorations and a soft ending and the captivating long phrases. It was refined and elegant string playing.

In the rush of the finale the clarity of the contrapuntal lines was always evident, and it was played not too fast, never rushing off the tracks. Bar lines seemed to evaporate.

Cellist Ann Francis Bayless and Rebecca McFaul (violin) provided inciteful and convincing spoken introductions to the concert’s final work.

Shostakovich’s E-Flat Major Quartet (Op. 117) began with contrasts of whimsey and strident power. Mr. Ottesen’s viola playing was poignant throughout, as were solos from violinist Robert Waters, often in the highest register. Though not as popular as the eight quartet, the F Major from 1962 found with the Fry all the identifiable characteristics of the composers late middle period – stark and menacing harmonies, often ferocious tempos, off-beat rhythms in march sections, melancholy tunes and raucous pizzicato phrases (fourth movement) and, in the Fry’s reading of the finale, high spirits and instrumental speed.

There were no breaks between the five movements, and the applause at the conclusion was loud but not long in duration. There was no encore.