Natalie Chee - Kathryn Selby - Lloyd Van't Hoff |
Performance
in the James Fairfax Theatre, National Gallery of Australia, 12th
July 2024.
Reviewed by BILL STEPHENS
Kathryn Selby |
There can be
few artists with the musical accomplishments of Kathryn Selby who work so hard at sharing
her passion for great music. An
accomplished musician in her own right, Selby continues to perform at virtuoso
level in each concert of the annual series she organises and tours nationally
each year.
For these
concerts she selects demanding repertoire that showcase the particular talents
of her associate musicians, often introducing them, and the repertoire, to the
loyal and knowledgeable audiences she has built up in each city over the years.
And if that
were not enough, you’ll find her greeting each member of those audiences as
they arrive for each concert, then host, stage manage, even arrange the
artist’s chairs and music stands between items.
For “Jewels
In The Crown” those Associate Artists were violinist, Natalie Chee, and Clarinettist,
Lloyd Van’t Hoff.
Currently
Head of Woodwind at the University of Adelaide’s Elder Conservatorium,
clarinettist Lloyd Van’t Hoff came to prominence when he won the Grand Prize,
the Sir Charles Moses Trophy and the Triffitt Prize in the 2015 Symphony
Australia ABC Young Performers Awards.
Kathryn Selby and Lloyd Van't Hoff in Selby and Friends - Photo Peter Hislop |
A founding
member of the award-winning Australian Wind Quintet, Acadia Winds, which in
that same year, 2015, was announced as Musica Viva Australia’s inaugural Future
Makers, Van’t Hoff has since then become a sought after performer at music
festivals around Australia and overseas, conducting masterclasses and teaching
residences in the USA, Canada and throughout Australia.
Which no
doubt accounts for his charming and informative introduction to the Brahms
second Clarinet Sonata, which he explained was among the last works composed by
Brahms who had become so captivated by the performance of German clarinettist,
Richard Muhlfield, that his four final works all featured the clarinet, of
which Sonata No.2 in E-flat major was a masterpiece.
He and Selby
then offered a sparkling rendition of this Sonata as proof, during which Van’t
Hoff captivated this reviewer with the physicality of his performance during which he expressed the emotions of the
music as much through his body as with his instrument.
Violinist,
Natalie Chee then joined Selby and Van’t Hoff to play a delightful arrangement by
young Australian composer, Andrew Howes, of Bartok’s much admired, 6 Romanian Dances.
Usually a
staple for young pianists, Howes’ arrangement for clarinet, violin and piano, could
hardly have received a more stimulating performance than that offered by these
three virtuosi.
Natalie Chee - Kathryn Selby |
Currently
concert master of the Gurzenich Orchestra in Cologne, Chee began her musical
career at the age of 4 on piano. By age 10 she was studying violin at the
Sydney Conservatorium and after winning numerous competitions and prizes while
still a teenager, began appearing as a soloist with all the Australian Symphony
Orchestras.
After
achieving her Soloist Diploma with High Distinction in 1998, she was invited to
become a member of Camerata Bern. During
this time she also co-founded the chamber music ensembles “Tiramisu” and the
Mozart Piano Quartet, and with these groups toured North and South America,
Europe and Australia.
In 2000 she
became 1st Concertmaster of Camerata Salzburg, then in 2009, 1st
Concertmaster of the Radio Symphony Orchestra in Stuttgart. She is a regular
guest Concertmaster of the Australian World Orchestra and BBC Symphony
Orchestra.
As is the
practice with Selby and Friends concerts, each soloist is given the opportunity
to introduce a work, so Chee’s task was to introduce another fascinating work
by Bartok entitled Contrasts for Clarinet,
Violin and Piano.
As Chee
explained in her delightful introduction, Contrasts
was commissioned by jazz musician, Benny Goodman and violinist, Joseph
Szigeti as an exploration of the timbre and colour variations between the
instruments.
Bartok
certainly took advantage of that commission to come up with a highly virtuosic
and exciting work, which apparently Goodman hated and struggled with. Pity he
couldn’t have heard this thrilling performance which kept the attentive
audience enthralled, especially as both the Van’t Hoff and Chee both required
two instruments for their performance.
Beethoven
described his mighty Kreutzer Sonata,
as a concerto for both instruments. In her introduction for the final work of the
evening, Selby shared fascinating details as to how the work received its
title.
Noted for
its technical difficulty, unusual length and emotional depth the Kreutzer Sonata was apparently written
for another virtuoso violinist, George Bridgetower. However when Bridgetower
unwittingly offended the composer, Beethoven, in a fit of pique, dedicated the
work to another violinist, Rodolphe Kreutzer, who hated the work and never
played it.
Unbowed by the technical challenges of the work, Selby and Chee thrilled their audience with an astonishing tour de force performance of this work, capping an evening, not only of superb music making, but also of exciting musical discoveries, so typical of a Selby and Friends recital.
Images by Peter Hislop
This review also published in AUSTRALIAN ARTS REVIEW. www.artsreview.com.au