ArtPower at UC San Diego presents performing arts that engage, energize, and transform the diverse cultural life of the university and San Diego.
          
    Through vibrant, challenging, multi-disciplinary performances, ArtPower seeks to develop more empathetic students and community members who are better prepared to engage in the world around them through their participation in highquality artistic, educational, and engagement programs that broaden thinking and awareness, deepen understanding, and encourage new dialogues across UC San Diego and the community.
          OUR IMPACT
          • ArtPower brings artists from around the world into UC San Diego classrooms
          • ArtPower provides students with free artist master classes
          • ArtPower integrates artist-led discussions into on-campus curricula.
          Chamber Music/USA and Russia
          ArtPower presents
          Hermitage
          Piano Trio
          April 28, 2022 at 8 pm
          Department of Music's
          Conrad Prebys Concert Hall
          Misha Keylin, violin
          Sergey Antonov, cello
          Ilya Kazantsev, piano
          Program
          Amy Beach (1867–1944)
          Piano Trio in a minor, opus 150
          Allegro
          Lento espressivo
          Allegro con brio
          Georgy Sviridov (1915–98)
          Piano Trio in a minor, opus 6
          Elegy: Allegro moderato
          Scherzo: Allegro vivo
          Funeral March: Andante
          Idyll: Allegretto
          intermission
          Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873–1943)
          Piano Trio in g minor, “Trio élégiaque”
          Lento lugubre
          Rachmaninoff
          Vocalise, opus 34, no. 14
          Gaspar Cassadó (1897–1966)
          Trio in C Major for Pianoforte, Violin, and Violoncello
          Allegro risoluto; Allegro ma non troppo Tempo moderato e pesante; Allegro giusto
          Recitativo: Moderato ed appassionato; Rondo: Allegro vivo
          3 Chamber Music
        
              
              
            
            About the Program
          Amy Beach
          Piano Trio in a minor, opus 150
          Born September 5, 1867, Henniker, NH
          Died December 27, 1944, New York City
          Amy Beach deserves to be remembered as more than just America’s first successful woman composer, as she is often categorized. A child prodigy, she appeared as piano soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at 17 and began composing while still a girl. At age 18 she married the Boston surgeon H.H.A. Beach, who—though a cultivated man musically—did not want his wife performing in public. He did, however, encourage her to compose. Beach had no formal training as a composer (which in her day meant European training), and as a composer she was essentially self-taught. Nevertheless, over the next several decades she produced a sequence of successful large-scale works. Her Mass in E-flat (1890) was the first work by a woman composer presented by Boston’s Haydn and Handel Society, and her “Gaelic” Symphony (1897) and Piano Concerto (1900) were performed to critical acclaim. Upon the death of her husband in 1910, Beach–then 43–resumed her career as a concert pianist, making a particularly successful series of tours through Europe. She composed prolifically throughout her life: though her list of opus numbers runs to 152, she actually wrote about 300 works. She was still active as pianist and composer at the time of her death in 1944 at 77.
          In her later years Beach liked to spend her summers at the MacDowell Colony in New Hampshire, and it was there during the summer of 1938 that she composed her Piano Trio in a minor. She was 71 years old, and it would be her final piece of chamber music. The Trio is an unusually concise work: its three movements span a total of only fifteen minutes. The opening Allegro gets off to an active but subdued beginning on a series of deep piano runs. Beach marks these murmurando e legatissimo (“murmuring and bound tightly together”). Cello and violin enter with what at first seem thematic fragments, but these gradually coalesce into the first theme The music reaches a moment of repose, and then violin and cello lay out the second idea in a section marked Tranquillo. The opening material returns and drives to a great climax marked Maestoso (“majestic”) as the strings’ melody is underpinned by hammered octaves from the piano. Its energy spent, the movement subsides to a shimmering conclusion.
          The central movement of the Piano Trio, marked Lento e espressivo, is in ABA form. Its outer sections are based on Beach’s own 1897 setting of Heinrich Heine’s poem Allein, a poem that had previously been set by such composers as Schubert, Clara Schumann, Grieg, and Wolf. Violin and cello sing the long main melody of the song in 6/8, and eventually the music comes to an expectant pause. The central episode is of unusual interest because it is based on quite a different song-tune. Nearly twenty years earlier, Beach had became interested in building a work on native materials: she drew three tunes from Franz Boas’ study of Inuit tribes and used them as the basis for her one-movement String Quartet. Now that interest returned, and she builds the central episode of the Piano Trio on another Inuit tune, here marked Presto. This tune dances nimbly along its 2/4 meter before the piano leads the movement back to its opening material. Beach rounds the movement off nicely with a quick reminiscence of the Inuit tune.
          4 Program
        After two fairly well-behaved movements, the concluding Allegro con brio brings a welcome measure of slashing energy. The music surges ahead propulsively, much of its energy coming from Beach’s constantly syncopated rhythms. The movement builds to a grand climax, once again marked Maestoso, and drives to a grand conclusion.
          The first performance of the Piano Trio took place on January 15, 1939 at the MacDowell Club in New York City. Beach was the pianist on that occasion.
          Georgy Sviridov
          Piano Trio in a minor, opus 6
          Born December 16, 1915, Fatezh, Kursk
          Died January 5, 1998, Moscow
          The music of Gyorgy Sviridov is not well-known in the West, but in Russia he is regarded as one of the last great composers of the Soviet era. Born in western Russia, Sviridov showed musical talent early and as a boy was sent to study in Leningrad. He eventually would spend five years at the Leningrad Conservatory, where he studied with Shostakovich (the two would remain good friends for the next forty years). Sviridov composed in many different forms, but it is likely that he will be best remembered for his music for voice. His many songs, cantatas, oratorios and choral works set texts by such Russian writers as Pushkin, Blok, Lermontov, Mayakovsky, and Pasternak, and Sviridov also set texts by non-Russian writers, including Shakespeare and Burns. He composed one opera, two symphonies, two piano concertos, and a number of film scores. The circumstances of the creation of Sviridov’s Piano Trio in a minor did much to shape its emotional impact. He began work on the first movement in Leningrad in 1941 while that city was under siege by the German army, but he did not complete the trio until four years later, when he was 30. It was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1946, though Sviridov remained dissatisfied—he returned to this music in 1955 and revised it.
          Svirdov’s Piano Trio in a minor is an exceptionally powerful piece of music: it opens with a movement titled Elegy and continues with a scherzo that is invariably described as a “danse macabre.” The third movement, longest of the four, is titled Funeral March, and Sviridov concludes with an Idyll that is anything but idyllic. Throughout, listeners will sense the influence of Sviridov’s teacher Shostakovich, who wrote his similarly-dark Piano Trio in e minor at this same time.
          The Elegy opens with a long, grieving melody for violin that sets the tone for much of what will follow, and the cello sings a second idea over steady col legno tapping from the violin. One feels a suppressed power in both these themes, and those premonitions are correct: the music quickly erupts into a violent development of these ideas, and the full-throated intensity of this movement strains the limits of chamber music. Its energy exhausted, the movement winds down to a barely-subdued conclusion.
          There does seem to be something demonic about the Scherzo, which will remind many of the scherzo of Shostakovich’s Trio in e minor, though Sviridov’s music has an identity all its own. Matters relax a little, but not much, in the central episode.
          Longest of the movements, the Funeral March is in many way the emotional climax of the work. The piano sits out for the first 90 seconds as the violin sings the bleak and
          5 Chamber Music
        mournful main idea over pizzicato accompaniment from the cello. The piano enters, the music recalls the main theme of the opening Elegy, and matters build to an overwhelming climax on a tragic funeral march that pounds its way along steady rhythms. The music fades into silence on eerie harmonics from the strings.
          We expect a movement titled Idyll to provide some relief, and at first Sviridov seems to satisfy that expectation—the music rocks along happily on its light-hearted opening theme. But this calm does not last for long. Back comes the demonic energy of the earlier movements, and any hope of pastoral bliss is shattered as the music seethes with the intensity heard earlier. Rather than ending with this furious activity, Sviridov winds these tensions down. We hear reminiscences of the opening idyll music, and—after all its fury—the Piano Trio in a minor ends in the middle of nowhere, drifting into a numb silence that resolves nothing that has gone before.
          This is a work that deserves to be better known.
          Sergei Rachmaninoff
          Piano Trio in g minor “Trio élégiaque”
          Born April 1, 1873, Oleg
          Died March 28, 1943, Beverly Hills
          Sometimes musical nicknames can be needlessly confusing, and that is certainly the case with Rachmaninoff’s two piano trios. He composed both of them very early in his career and nicknamed both of them Trio élégiaque.
          Rachmaninoff had entered the Moscow Conservatory at age 12, studying piano and composition, and he proved a brilliant success at both: he graduated with honors in piano in June 1891 and won the gold medal—the highest possible award—in composition a year later. It was while he was still a student at the Conservatory that the young composer scheduled his first formal concert for January 30, 1892. On this program Rachmaninoff played piano works by other composers, and he also introduced several new works of his own, including the present one-movement piano trio. But he barely got the trio done in time—he composed it in four days (January 18–21), leaving just a week to get the parts copied and the music rehearsed.
          Rachmaninoff’s second Trio élégiaque would be written in memory of Tchaikovsky, but his intention in the first was not so specific—that title suggests a general atmosphere rather than commemorating a particular event or loss. The music is marked Lento lugubre, which suggests its character perfectly, and listeners will discover that at age 18 Rachmaninoff already had command of that vein of somber lyricism that marks his mature music. Over subtly-shifting string accompaniment, the piano in octaves lays out the trio’s main idea before the strings are allowed to take it up. The violin has the second subject, which preserves the trio’s somber character, and the development–while active–remains at the measured opening tempo. Rachmaninoff closes out the trio by recalling the main theme in the strings above a darkly-tolling piano accompaniment.
          6 Program
        Sergei Rachmaninoff
          Vocalise, opus 34, no. 14
          Rachmaninoff wrote so much bravura piano music and so many dramatic orchestral works that one tends to overlook his greatest strength as a composer—an incredible lyric gift best evident in his more than seventy songs and numerous choral works. Vocalise dates from the summer of 1912, which Rachmaninoff spent at Ivanovka, his family’s country estate. There he completed a cycle of fourteen songs, tailoring each to the talents of an individual Russian singer he knew. The last of the fourteen—dedicated to soprano Antonina Nezhdanovka, a member of the Moscow Grand Opera—was wordless: the soprano was simply to sing the melodic line over piano accompaniment. The song proved popular, and a few years later—at the suggestion of conductor Serge Koussevitsky—Rachmaninoff arranged Vocalise for string orchestra. Vocalise has haunted performers as well as listeners: in addition to the original versions for voice and for orchestra, the current catalog lists transcriptions for cello, piano, and saxophone.
          It is easy to understand this music’s appeal. Vocalise offers Rachmaninoff’s most bittersweet lyricism, suffused with a dark, elegiac quality—this music was, in fact, performed at the memorial service following Rachmaninoff’s own death.
          Gaspar Cassadó
          Trio in C Major for Pianoforte, Violin, and Violoncello
          Born September 30, 1897, Barcelona
          Died December 24, 1966, Madrid
          Of Catalonian descent, cellist Gaspar Cassadó began his studies in Barcelona but went to Paris at age 13 to study with Pablo Casals. He launched an international career shortly after World War I, making his American debut in 1936 and returning for a second visit in 1949. As a cellist, he was renowned for the richness of his sound and made famous recordings of the concertos of Schumann, Haydn, Boccherini, and Vivaldi; late in life, he made several chamber music recordings with Yehudi Menuhin.
          Cassadó was known in this country as a composer long before he appeared here as a performer: in 1928, Wilhelm Mengelberg had led the New York Philharmonic in the world premiere of Cassadó's Catalonian Rhapsody. As might be expected, Cassadó wrote primarily for cello, and his compositions include a cello concerto and arrangements for cello of Mozart’s Horn Concerto No. 3 and Weber’s Clarinet Concerto.
          A frequent performer of chamber music, Cassadó also wrote a great deal for chamber ensembles, including two cello sonatas. If there was a Catalonian side to Cassadó, there was also a classical element in his make-up, and this is on display in the Trio in C Major. It is in three movements in the expected fast-slow-fast sequence, though Cassadó challenges expectations at a number of points. After a dramatic first movement, the second is set at a heavy pace rather than being lyric, and the finale opens with a powerful recitative before this impassioned movement takes wing at the Allegro vivo.
          Program notes by Eric Bromberger
          7 Chamber Music
        
              
              
            
            About the Artists
          Now entering their second decade, the United States-based Hermitage Piano Trio has solidified its place as one of the world’s leading piano trios, garnering multiple GRAMMY® Award nominations and receiving both audience and press accolades for their performances that the Washington Post singled out for “such power and sweeping passion that it left you nearly out of breath.”
          The Trio is a champion of immense repertoire ranging from the works of the great European tradition to more contemporary American pieces. Hallmarks of the Hermitage Piano Trio are their impeccable musicianship, sumptuous sound and interpretative range, which have led to demand for many repeat performances. They have appeared on major chamber music series and festivals in Los Angeles, New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Miami, Washington, D.C., Tucson, Portland (OR), Tulsa, San Diego, Corpus Christi, Newport (RI), San Miguel de Allende (Mexico), Winnipeg (Canada), New Orleans, and many others. In addition to their extensive touring engagements, the Trio is involved in educational and outreach projects.
          Hermitage Piano Trio began its multiple-album recording deal with Reference Recordings, debuting its CD titled “Rachmaninoff,” which featured Sergei Rachmaninoff’s two trios and his unforgettable Vocalise. Echoing many enthusiastic reviews of the “Rachmaninoff” recording, The Strad lauded the Trio’s “outstanding playing in intense, heartfelt performances,” and American Record Guide praised that “the Hermitage wants to burst forth with passion, to let the whole world know! I am really glad that someone can still play that way in our utterly unromantic age.” Their next album release is slated for 2023, and will feature the music of 20th century Spanish romantic composers.
          A rarity in the chamber music world, this elite Trio brings together three accomplished soloists in their own right. An established soloist, violinist Misha Keylin has performed in forty-five countries spanning five continents. He has captured special attention with his world-premiere CD series, released by Naxos, of Henri Vieuxtemps seven violin concertos and showpieces. These recordings have already sold hundreds of thousands of copies worldwide and have garnered numerous press accolades and awards, including “Critic’s Choice” by the New York Times, Gramophone, and The Strad. Hailed as “a brilliant cellist” by the legendary Mstislav Rostropovich, Sergey Antonov went on to prove his mentor’s proclamation when he became one of the youngest cellists ever awarded the gold medal at the world’s premier musical contest, the quadrennial International Tchaikovsky Competition. Antonov’s entry into this elite stratum of sought-after classical artists has already placed him on stages at world-renowned venues from Russia’s Great Hall at the Moscow Conservatory to Suntory Hall in Tokyo. And pianist Ilya Kazantsev, praised by the Washington Post as “virtually flawless,” has performed as a recitalist and a soloist with orchestras in Russia, Canada, Europe, and the United States. Mr. Kazantsev’s many awards and honors include first prize at the Nikolai Rubinstein International Competition (France) as well as top prizes at the International Chopin Competition (Russia) and the World Piano Competition (USA).
          Hermitage Piano Trio Photo by Lisa-Marie Mazzucco
          8 Program
        
              
              
            
            ARTPOWER DONORS 2022–23
          CATALYST ($20,000+)
          Judith Bachner and Eric Lasley
          Elaine Galinson Fund at the Jewish Community Foundation
          Bobbie and Jon Gilbert
          Joan and Irwin Jacobs Fund  of the Jewish Community Foundation
          Patricia and Christopher Weil  of The Weil Family Foundation
          The Parker Foundation
          CREATOR ($10,000–19,999)
          Phyllis and Daniel Epstein
          Ronald and Wynona Goldman
          Jack Lampl
          New England Foundation for the Arts
          Charles and Marilyn Perrin
          George Clement Perkins Endowment
          ADVOCATE ($2,500–9,999)
          
    Joan J. Bernstein ArtPower Student Engagement Endowment Fund
          Maureen and C. Peter Brown
          Anne Marie Pleska and Luc Cayet
          Josephine Kiernan and Bjorn Bjerede
          In Memory of Jennifer A. Dennis
          Martha and Edward Dennis
          Renita Greenberg and Jim Allison
          Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore
          Barbara and Sam Takahashi
          Hamburger Chamber Music Series Endowment Fund
          Jack Lampl
          Eva and Doug Richman
          Ruth S. Stern ArtPower  Student Engagement Fund
          GUARDIAN ($1,000–2,499)
          Joyce Axelrod and Joseph Fisch
          Janice Steinberg and John Cassidy
          Marilyn Colby
          Beverly Freemont
          Kim Signoret-Paar
          CONTRIBUTOR ($500–999)
          Janice Alper
          Janice and Nelson Byrne
          Consulate General of Israel
          Charles Kantor
          Marilies Schoelflin
          Connie Beardsley
          Phyllis and Edward Mirsky
          Sharon Perkowski
          Felize Levine
          SPARK ($250–499)
          James and Kathleen Stiven
          Jess and Meg Mandel
          Barry and Jennfer Greenberg
          Mary L. Beebe
          Charles Reilly
          K. Andrew Achterkirchen
          Paulyne D. Becerra
          Turea Z. Erwin
          Samuel and Theresa Buss
          Natalee C. Ellars
          Maya Ridinger
          YORK SOCIETY
          Donors who make provisions for ArtPower in their estate
          Joyce Axelrod and Joseph Fisch
          Judith Bachner and Eric Lasley
          Ruth Stern
          Kathryn Sturch
          ARTPOWER STAFF DONORS
          Carolena Deutsch-Garcia
          Jordan Peimer
          Kathryn Sturch
          FOUNDATION/CORPORATE SPONSORS
          CORPORATE SPONSORS
          New England Foundation for the Arts
          
    
    The Parker Foundation
          
    Consulate General of Israel
          Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore
          9 Chamber Music
        POWERPLAYERS
          PowerPlayers are an exceptional group of donors that have made a three year commitment to support ArtPower.
          Joyce Axelrod and Joseph Fisch
          Joan Bernstein
          Marilyn Colby
          Martha and Ed Dennis
          Phyllis and Daniel Epstein
          Elaine Galinson
          Bobbie and Jon Gilbert
          Renita Greenberg and Jim Alison
          Eric Lasley and Judith Bachner
          Sharon Perkowski
          Kim Signoret-Paar
          Paul and Edith H. Sanchez
          Pat Weil and Christopher Weil
          A portion of funding for ArtPower is provided by the UC San Diego Student Services Fee Committee.
          Donor list and PowerPlayer list reflecting gifts and pledges allocated for September 1, 2021 through September 30, 2022.
          ARTPOWER STAFF
          Joanna Christian, Associate Director of Marketing & Communications, Campus Performance and Events Office
          Carolena Deutsch-Garcia, Associate Director of Development
          Jennifer Mancano, Events & Performing Arts
          Business Manager
          Jordan Peimer, Artistic Director
          Colleen Kollar Smith, Executive Director, Campus Performance and Events Office
          Kathryn Sturch, Production Manager
          Alyssa Villaseñor, Marketing Manager
          Student Staff
          Marketing and Graphic Design Assistants
          Ashley Asadi ‘24
          Holden Bailey ‘23
          Yumei Feng ‘23
          Tiffany Liang ‘23
          Rachel Paner ‘24
          Hieu Phan ‘25
          Events Promotions Assistants
          Paloma Diaz ‘24
          Rain Dong ‘25
          Ishiba Dube ‘26
          Kathleen Hoang ‘25
          Kellie Huang, ‘25
          Kaylie Lam ‘25
          Kristy Lee ‘23
          Julie Li ‘25
          Martica Manuel, ‘26
          Alice Nguyen ‘26
          Anne Nguyen ‘25
          Niko Parker ‘24
          Kadie Qi ‘25
          Heidi Shin ‘25
          Hao Wang ‘24
          Angela Wu ‘24
          Sasha Zabegalin ‘24
          Media Assistants
          Diego Pereya ‘26
          Kieran Vu ‘25
          Jules Yap ‘23
          BECOME AN ARTPOWER SUPPORTER TODAY & ENJOY VALUABLE BENEFITS!
          As we move into the new ArtPower 2022–23 live arts season, the generosity of our donors quite literally helps make our performances possible. Our donors also get to enjoy valuable benefits, see more here: bit.ly/artpower-benefits. Make a gift today by easily scanning the QR code.
          Thank you for making ArtPower performances possible! All inquiries can be directed to our Associate Director of Development, carolena@ucsd.edu.
          
    10 Program