Ernö Dohnányi, Sextet in C Major, Op.37 For Violin, Viola, Cello, Clarinet, Horn and Piano
Sextet in C
Major, Op.37
For
Violin,
Viola,
Cello, Clarinet,
Horn and
Piano
Live recording
2012
Erard Ensemble:
Edward Janning - piano
Hein Wiedijk - clarinet
Laurens Otto - horn
Casper Bleumers - violin
Guus Jeukendrup - viola
Jan Bastiaan
Neven - cello
"
The Sextet in C Major, Op.37, dates from 1935 and is
Dohnanyi's last piece of chamber music. It is for the unusual combination of clarinet, horn, piano, violin, viola and cello. This fact has virtually insured it would be little heard in concert—a great pity because it is a masterwork. From a tonal standpoint, the Sextet shows Dohnanyi alive to the musical developments in the
Europe of the
1930's, jazz in particular, which was gaining a real foothold throughout western and central Europe. The opening
Allegro appassionato is a big and, at times, turbulent movement. It begins with a marvelous heroic theme introduced by the horn. It has a dramatic, epic quality to it, combined with a sense of suspense. The overall mood is not particularly sunny, although it has its moments, for the most part is dark and ominous. The second movement,
Intermezzo, adagio, begins quietly and in a dark vein with the piano playing a rising series of chords, piercing the longer-lined string parts. In no way is it an intermezzo in the
Mendelssohnian sense. After some while, a menacing, highly dramatic slow march is introduced. One might imagine a gang of prisoners being paraded to the spot where their execution was to take place. Although the movement ends quietly, no sense of tranquility is created. The third movement, Allegro con sentimento—presto, quasi l'istesso tempo—meno mosso, is a loose set of variations. The main theme, very Brahmsian, is entrusted to the clarinet, which presents it in its entirety. The first variation has the piano elaborating upon it quietly. The horn is used tellingly to create a sense of weight in the slower variations. As the movement ends, the horn brings back the opening theme of the first movement which leads, without pause, directly to the brilliant finale, Allegro vivace, giocoso. Primarily written in the style of the
European jazz of the 1930's, the mood is playful and yet at the same time, the treatment is also serious. As one wag has written, the music sounds like an inebriated Viennese hotel band's haphazard attempt to render
Gershwin. Incredibly, right in the middle of the jazzy theme, a lopsided
Viennese waltz is interjected, as if the musicians had suddenly become confused and lost their way, but continued nonetheless in a desperate attempt to save face. The coda is an extraordinary combination of the jazz elements, the waltz and the heroic opening theme.
This is an extraordinary work of the first magnitude. Here are four very striking movements, each quite different and yet interrelated. The part writing could not be better and one feels that nothing could be more natural than a work for piano, string trio, horn and clarinet. Of course, the exact opposite is true."---The
Chamber Music Journal
Ernst von Dohnanyi (1877-1960
Ernö Dohnányi in
Hungarian) is generally regarded, after
Liszt, as
Hungary's most versatile musician. He was an active as a concert pianist, composer, conductor and teacher and must be considered one of the chief influences on Hungary's musical life in the
20th century. Certainly, his chamber music is very fine, with most of it being in the masterwork category. Yet, sadly and inexplicably, it has virtually disappeared from the concert stage. Dohnanyi studied piano and composition in his native
Pressburg (Bratislava) before entering the
Budapest Academy. His first published work, his
Piano Quintet No.1, was championed by no less an authority than
Johannes Brahms. Upon graduating in the spring of 1897, Dohnanyi embarked on a dazzling career as a concert artist, often playing in chamber ensembles.
Later, he also devoted considerable time to teaching and conducting.