Phœnix

“Lettura – Fermata”

The Swiss composer Caroline Charrière was a trained flautist (she studied with Aurèle Nicolet, among others) and choral conductor. Since the premiere of her work “Vox Aeterna” for narrator, female choir and orchestra in 1993, composing has become an increasingly important part of her life, and in 2000 she finally decided to give composition the most important place in her work. The sextet “Papillons de Lumière” was one of her last works before she died in 2018 after a long illness.

The Canadian composer Thierry Tidrow calls his “Four Elementary Fantasies” gallows humour scenes based on cataclysmic poems by Christian Morgenstern. The virtuoso duo “Die Flamme” (The flame) is tailor-made for soprano Sarah Maria Sun. The music theatre elements suit her and her duo partner, clarinettist Toshiko Sakakibara. With this duo, we will experience an “opera in miniature” that does absolute justice to the enigmatic texts by Munich poet Christian Morgenstern!

The Canadian composer Claude Vivier writes about “Lettura di Dante”:
“Lettura di Dante” based on texts from Dante’s “La divina commedia” was composed in Cologne in 1973/74 and is based on a melody with six cells of one, two or three notes, which are constantly repeated and slightly modified in the soprano. This melody and all its transpositions and mirrorings were then combined into a long twelve-part counterpoint, the parts of which are rhythmically articulated in augmentation and diminution. From this counterpoint, a ‘melody of tone colours’ emerges, which, shaped by six instruments, becomes a counter-song to the original melody.
“Lettura di Dante” is divided into six main sections and also contains a seventh section in which the original melody is treated as a four-part counterpoint. Each of these sections contains a solo and a group of one to six instruments. In addition, a cell of the “melody” is played in the course of each section in the tempo whole=15, the basic tempo of the entire piece.
This music is dedicated to Peter Eötvös, a musician from the Stockhausen group whom I got to know during my stay in Cologne, and tends towards a new sensibility that I have always perceived in the marginalised, the “bums” or “clochards” (in Montreal “robineaux”) since my birth. Also this beauty and purity that old people and children evoke in me, or this closeness to death that my father and mother always imposed on me. The vision of an unattainable world in a life in which money and power determine everything. A life full of loneliness.
It is above all these lonely people, which we all are, that I think about when I write. I no longer think of the “future” or the “past”, but of a kind of vanished present, a kind of intangible joy mixed with the sadness of a child who has lost his mother. (Claude Vivier – 1974)

The Hungarian composer Péter Eötvös writes about “Fermata”:
“Fermata” (2020/21) is a concerto for 15 musicians sitting/standing one and a half metres apart. They perform a kind of time report: of our Covid days and pandemic years, in which normal life suddenly stops, then continues somewhat chaotically and stops again with tragic events.
The social tensions that have been mounting for centuries seem to have lit the fuse at the moment. The question is: how long is the fuse and how quickly or slowly will it detonate the bomb?
Such thoughts swirl around in the composer’s head while he writes the notes and rather has the feeling that the notes are writing him. (Peter Eötvös – 2021)


Program

Caroline Charrière (1960–2018) “Papillons de Lumière” for 6 instruments (2017) – 10’ Thierry Tidrow (*1986) “Die Flamme» (The flame) for soprano and clarinet (2017) from «Vier Elementarphantasien” (Four Elementary Fantasies) (2017–2020) – 4’ Claude Vivier (1948–1983) “Lettura di Dante” for soprano and 7 instruments (1974) – 26’ Péter Eötvös (1944–2024) “Fermata” for ensemble (2021) – 18’
Sarah Maria Sun
soprano
Jürg Henneberger
conductor
Christoph Bösch
flute, piccolo
Antje Thierbach
oboe, English horn
Toshiko Sakakibara
clarinet
Christian Spitzenstätter
bass clarinet
Povilas Bingelis
bassoon, contrabassoon
horn
Nenad Marković
trumpet
Michael Büttler
trombone
João Pacheco
percussion
Kirill Zvegintsov
piano
Friedemann Treiber
violin
Daniel Hauptmann
violin
Mirka Šćepanović
viola
Benedikt Böhlen
cello
Aleksander Gabryś
double bass