A Prodigy, a Première and an Early Atonal Work

The summer air will resound with chamber music this weekend, with a pair of concerts at Hotchkiss, and a première at Music Mountain. The Summer Portals Chamber Concert series at Hotchkiss will bring the Brentano String Quartet to Elfers Hall at 7:30 p.m. on July 9 and 10. The Friday program features the Princeton-based group in works of Haydn, Hartke and Beethoven.

   On Saturday, they will be joined by several of the artists in residence at Hotchkiss for a concert of Schumann, Ives, and the the glorious Brahms Sextet in B-flat. Admission is free.

   On July 14, the eminent British choral conductor Michael Brewer will lead a vocal program. More information at www.hotchkiss.org/summer or 860-435-3775.

   At Music Mountain, a young Canadian prodigy and the Penderecki String Quartet will perform Chopin’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Minor July 11, at 3 p.m., marking the 200th birthday of this Polish composer.

   The arrangement of the concerto for piano quintet is a festival premiere. Chopin was a prodigy who at 15 was considered the best pianist in Warsaw, and four years later turned out both of his piano concertos, which have remained vital parts of the repertory ever since. It was common practice at the time to create smaller arrangements of symphonic works so that they could be played in more intimate settings. This arrangement dates from three years after the work’s premiere. It has been recorded a number of times.

   Whether pianist Jan Lisiecki will be a superstar like Chopin remains to be seen, but at the tender age of 15 he has already been on the concert stage for six years and appeared with Yo-Yo Ma, Pinchas Zukerman and Emanuel Ax. His partners in the performance, originally from Poland, now live in Canada, and have an impressive discography of many types of music and a long list of performances each year.

   The program also includes Schumann’s Quartet in A, Op. 41, No. 3; and Webern’s “Five Movements for String Quartet,†Op. 5, his first atonal work which was completely unlike anything else written in 1909. Listen to this piece on YouTube and imagine what an effect it would have had on Viennese concertgoers accustomed to Johann Strauss and Mahler. But even if the tonal language is utterly different, the edgy, moody emotions are not so far removed from late Mahler or another Strauss, Richard. Tickets at musicmountain.org, 860-824-7126, or at the door.

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