Engraved concert ticket, the design attributed
to William Hogarth.
From a collection at the Clark Library.
Chamber Music,
2000-01
Chamber Music at the Clark
After Five Years
Chamber Music at the Clark has
concluded its fifth season, and we want to express our deep
gratitude to all whose steadfast generosity has made the continuation
of our overwhelmingly successful music series possible. Our
key supporters in this endeavor have been the Ahmanson Foundation,
the Edmund D. Edelman Foundation, Henry J. Bruman, and Caron
and Steven Broidy.
The support of these friends and that of many others has made it possible
for us to make excellent strides toward our long-term goal of establishing
an endowment in perpetuity to ensure the continued performance of music
at the Clark Library. The Chamber Music Endowment Fund, established in
1996 with Henry Bruman's challenge grant of $50,000, has, thanks to individual
and institutional donations, grown to over $160,000, and, with the help
of continuing donations, we are adding to it each year. Yet, to support
our four annual concerts, the endowment fund, which earns just five percent
a year, will need to grow to at least $400,000.
We therefore urge our loyal supporters to renew their pledges, and we invite
all those who love chamber music but haven't yet made a donation to join
in the cause. Anyone who would like to contribute to the Chamber Music
Endowment Fund can request a donor's card from the Center (310-206-8552)
or simply send a check, payable to the UCLA Foundation ("Chamber
Music" should appear in the memo field), to the Center for 17th- and 18th-Century
Studies, 310 Royce Hall, UCLA, 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, California
90095-1404.
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With the exception of the program scheduled for
December 3,
all of the year's concerts will take place at the Clark Library.
The Clark is located at 2520 Cimarron Street,
in the West Adams district of Los Angeles.
Reservations by Lottery:——
Extremely high demand and limited seating, both
at the Clark and at the campus venue, require that reservations to concerts
be made on the basis of a prepaid, mail-in lottery. Admission fees and
deadlines for submissions to the reservation lotteries are given after
each concert's listing. Reservation-by-lottery forms are available at the
Center. Reservations are confirmed, or forms and checks returned, by mail
well in advance of each concert.
Requests for additional information and for reservation forms
should be addressed to the Center by e-mail (
) or by phone (310-206-8552).
To receive routine mailings about music programs, please sign up to be
on the Center/Clark
mailing list.
The concert announced below will be held
at the Clark Library by special arrangement.
A Golden Age of French Music: from
Louis XIV to Louis XV
November 4 (Saturday)
6:00 p.m. at the Clark Library
a concert organized by the
American Association of Teachers of French
and the
Alliance Française of Los Angeles
with the French baroque ensemble
La Turbulente
With all inquiries and requests for reservations,
please call 310-393-7930
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November 19 (Sunday), 2:00 p.m.
Chamber Music at the Clark
Lanier Trio
William Preucil, violin
Dorothy Lewis, cello
Cary Lewis, piano
Recognized for their "lavish, impeccable ensemble and golden tone," the
Lanier Trio has performed throughout the United States and across Europe
since 1979, maintaining its current membership since 1986. As noted by
Strad
Magazine, "the musical collaboration here is high, with a palpable
level of comfort among the players that can take years to find." The feeling
of ensemble unanimity is paramount--fine points of phrasing and ensemble
are outstandingly executed; little wonder that the trio has enjoyed performances
in places as far-flung as Hawaii and Warsaw, where the leading Polish critic
raved that they "overwhelmed the audience with excitement in a ravishing
performance." Little wonder, as well, that William Preucil has remained
a member of the trio, even as he enjoys his appointment, since 1995, as
concertmaster of the Cleveland Orchestra.
Named in honor of the Georgia poet and musician Sidney Lanier, the trio
has produced notable recordings. Their two-disk release of Antonin Dvorák's
"Four Piano Trios"--regarded as four of the glories of the chamber music
literature--was listed by Time Magazine as one of the "best of 1993";
the recording has been praised for its fine musicianship, its warmth in
their treatment of Dvorák's wealth of melody and countermelody,
its excellent instrumental balance. With the aid of a grant from the Aaron
Copland Fund, the Lanier Trio has more recently recorded selected chamber
works by American composer Stephen Paulus, who, according to critics, does
not hesitate when it comes to making demands on the players. Many of the
Paulus works were written for these musicians, and the artists come through
with sympathy as well as artistry. The ensemble's world premiere recording
of these finely crafted, eloquently expressive pieces by Stephen Paulus
is remarkable.
After a performance in Atlanta, one reviewer was moved to comment, "Playing
with a rapport as if they'd been concertizing together all their lives,
with a spontaneity as if they were actively engaging these works for the
first time, and a bravura that only comes when you've left any worries
about note-perfection far behind in the dust, theirs was direct emotional
communication . . . between performers and audience" of a kind rarely seen.
- PROGRAM -
Franz Schubert, Sonata in B-flat, D. 28
Felix Mendelssohn, Trio in C Minor
Antonin Dvorák, "Dumky" Trio, op. 90

Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on October 16
December 3 (Sunday), 2:00 p.m.
Special Program [On the UCLA Campus]
"What Passions Cannot Music Raise and Quell?"
John Dryden in Music
A concert presented by the Department of Musicology,
UCLA
cosponsored by the Center and the Clark
—-
to be held at 314 Royce Hall, UCLA
-—
[parking will be available for $6 in structure 5]
In a program dedicated to musical works composed to texts by John Dryden,
soloists, chorus, and orchestra from the UCLA musicology and music departments
will perform works by Henry Purcell and Louis Grabu under the direction
of the distinguished scholar and conductor Philip Brett.
- PROGRAM -
Henry Purcell, Sonata for Trumpet and Strings in
D Major
Henry Purcell, Selections from King Arthur, Act
3
Henry Purcell, Chaconne for Strings in G Minor
Louis Grabu, Selections from Albion and Albanius

Admission fee: $10
Reservations lottery closes on November 1
December 10 (Sunday), 2:00 p.m.
Clark Recitals
Il Ruggiero
Emanuela Marcante, conductor; also piano and harpsichord
Maria Chiara Pavone, mezzo soprano; Gianluca Pasolini, tenor;
Danele Tonini, bass; Gabriele Raspanti, violin; Alessandro Palmieri, cello
This
Italian musical ensemble, founded in Bologna by Emanuela Marcante, has
made extensive tours of Europeand North America with programs of seventeenth-,
eighteenth-, and nineteenth-century music. Their original productions
of baroque opera, which often employ improvisation, preserve a historical
perspective even as they look toward connections with the principles of
contemporary music. Their repertoire ranges from Monteverdi, Scarlatti,
and Salomone Rossi’s Hebrew music to Beethoven, Rossini, and Donizetti.
—PROGRAM—
Il ritorno di Ulisse in Patria
by Claudio Monteverdi
Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on November 6
January 7 (Sunday),
2:00 p.m.
Chamber Music at the Clark
Pacifica Quartet
Simin Ganatra, violin; Isabel Trautwein, violin;
Kathryn Lockwood, viola; Brandon Vamos, cello
With an impressive array of awards to its credit, including the 1998 Naumburg
Chamber Music Award, the 1997 Nathan Wedeen Management Award at the Concert
Artists Guild Competition, and the 1996 Grand Prize at the Coleman Chamber
Music Competition, the brilliant young Pacifica Quartet is earning a reputation
for distinctive music-making. The New York Times
admired the quartet's
"close togetherness through shifts and swerves of speed and texture," and
the Los Angeles Times found that "their confidence is high and their
playing compellingly expressive." From its inception, the Pacifica has
enjoyed an active touring schedule, which has recently taken it as far
afield as Australia and Panama, and coast-to-coast from Los Angeles and
San Francisco to Lincoln Center's' Alice Tully Hall in New York. Their
1999-2000 season included performances in Honolulu, Pittsburgh, Baltimore,
and New York. The Quartet has participated in numerous festivals, including
Music at Gretna, the Bellingham Music Festival, Strings in the Mountains,
the Sedona Chamber Music Festival, La Jolla Summerfest, and the Santa Fe
Chamber Music Festival, which sponsored the Pacifica on a New Mexico tour
in 1996.
Founded in Los Angeles in 1994, the Quartet is now based in Chicago, where
it serves as resident quartet at the University of Chicago and the Music
Institute of Chicago. Its multiple and varied residency activities include
concert series at both institutions. In addition, the quartet is involved
in the Music Integration Project, an innovative educational outreach program
that provides musical performances and teacher training in inner-city elementary
schools. In the spring of 1999, the Pacifica had the honor of being selected
for a two-week residency with National Public Radio's "Performance Today"
in Washington D.C.
- PROGRAM -
Felix Mendelssohn, Quartet in A Minor, op. 13 ("Ist
es Wahr?")
György Ligeti, Quartet no. 1
Ludwig van Beethoven, Quartet in F, op. 59, no. 1
Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on November 22
January 21 (Sunday),
2:00
p.m.
Chamber Music at the Clark
Rossetti String Quartet
Nina Bodnar, violin; Henry Gronnier, violin;
Thomas Diener, viola; Eric Gaenslen, cello
The members of the Rossetti String Quartet, all with distinguished backgrounds
as soloists and chamber music players, are unified by a deep abiding love
for the string quartet literature and its presentation in a natural, yet
very personal style. The quartet's repertoire is firmly based in the classic/romantic
quartet style and extends into the contemporary literature. Among the group's
engagements in North America last season were concerts in Mexico, North
Carolina, and California, most notably in Los Angeles and Santa Barbara.
In a residency at the University of California, Santa Barbara, the Rossetti
Quartet performed a concert of Mendelssohn, Kodaly and Dvorák, held
master classes, and engaged in other outreach activities. Overseas, the
ensemble made several appearances in the Netherlands, with pianist Jean-Yves
Thibaudet, playing works by Mozart, Kodaly and Franck.
When the members of the ensemble joined forces, their choice of the nineteenth-century
Pre-Raphaelite painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti as their namesake seemed
appropriate on several levels. Rossetti's work, from a unique painter's
perspective, represents ideals which are close to those of the quartet
members. Not the least of these is a return to naturalism and lifelike
color in a world grown complacent with the style of its own time. Through
the vivid use of color, whether in music or in painting, focal points come
into relief and recede in what seems to be a living tableau.
- PROGRAM -
Ludwig van Beethoven, Quartet in B-flat Major, op.
18, no. 6
Heitor Villa-Lobos, Quartet no. 5
Antonin Dvorák, Quartet in E-flat Major, op.
51
Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on November 22
February 4 (Sunday), 2:00 p.m.
Chamber Music at the Clark
Artemis Quartet
Natalia Prischepenko and Heime Müller, violins;
Volker Jacobsen, viola; Eckart Runge, cello
On
its North American debut tour in March 1998, the Artemis Quartet performed
nine concerts in twelve days, including appearances in Chicago, Washington,
New Orleans, Cincinnati, and Columbus, where the critic called their "electrifying
performance" a "stunning, even visceral, experience."
The Artemis Quartet's meteoric rise to renown across Europe began with
its sweep of the top awards at the German Music Competition in 1995, the
Munich Competition in 1996, and the Borciani Competition in 1997. The Artemis
has gone on to appear in major venues from the Concertgebouw in Amsterdam
to the Beethovenhaus in Bonn and the Salzburg Music Festival. Its performances
have inspired such critical superlatives as "already at the top" (Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung) and "a young wonder"
(Braunschweiger Zeitung).
Formed at the Musikhochschule in Lubbock, Germany, where its members studied
with Walter Levin, formerly of the LaSalle Quartet, the quartet also worked
with the Alban Berg Quartet in Cologne, and in master classes with the
Emerson and Juilliard Quartets. For the 1997-1998 season, it was in residence
at the Musikhochschule in Vienna, at the invitation of the Alban Berg Quartet,
where it made a two-concert debut at the Vienna Konzerthaus. The Quartet
now resides in Berlin.
In the 1999-2000 season, the Artemis Quartet toured Japan, returned to
the Concertgebouw and the Vienna Konzerthaus, and made a twelve-concert
North American tour that included appearances at Carnegie Hall's Weill
Recital Hall, the Library of Congress in Washington, and UCLA. The group's
January 2000 appearance at the Clark met with an overwhelmingly enthusiastic
response, and we are pleased to present the Artemis for the second time.
- PROGRAM -
Franz Schubert, Quartet in C major
Dmitri Shostakovich, Quartet no. 9, op. 117 (1964)
Igor Stravinsky, Three Pieces for String Quartet
Ludwig van Beethoven, Quartet in G Major, op. 18,
no. 2, "Compliments"
Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on November 22
May 19 (Saturday-[date
tentative] )
Clark Recitals
Tom Beghin, fortepiano,
Joseph Haydn's Keyboard Sonatas
An expert artist on early pianos and their predecessors, the harpsichords
and clavichords, Tom Beghin, Assistant Professor in UCLA’s music department,
is presenting a fascinating series of concerts devoted to Franz Josef
Haydn's keyboard sonatas performed on period instruments. For any lover
of eighteenth-century keyboard music, the experience of hearing Haydn's
masterpieces played on the instruments for which they were composed is
not to be missed. In the first program of the cycle, and his first appearance
at the Clark, last June, Mr. Beghin performed the "Auenbrugger Sonatas"
(1780) on a beautiful replica of an Anton Walter fortepiano, an instrument
whose acoustics invite performers to highlight the interior architecture
of compositions: phrase structures, articulation patterns, and characteristic
rhetorical gestures become transparent, allowing audiences to savor the
finer points of Haydn's music.

After the spring 2000 concert at the Clark, Tom Beghin demonstrated
some of the intricate features of the fortepiano to interested members
of the audience.
In the cycle's fifth program, the second at the Clark, Mr. Beghin will
play the sonatas referred to by Haydn in his own catalogue as “6 Sonaten
von Anno 776” (Hob.xvi:27–32). Finished by 1776 and published in 1778,
these were Haydn’s second set of published sonatas, after the six dedicated
to Prince Nikolaus Esterházy (1773) and before those dedicated to
the sisters von Auenbrugger. With a content ranging from comical to serious,
carefree to troubled, simple to complex, the “Anno 776” compositions satisfied
perfectly the keen musical appetites of the new and growing market of amateur
players. Tom Beghin will perform these wonderfully varied and entertaining
sonatas alternately on the “old” harpsichord and the “new” fortepiano.
Admission fee: $15
Reservations lottery closes on April 27
For inquiries,
please email the Center at
or phone (310-206-8552).
To request routine mailings about music programs,
please sign up to be on the Center/Clark
mailing list.
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