CRITICS'
CHOICE 2009
Donald Vroon,
Editor, American Record Guide
"...the
present issue is among the more consistently satisfying accounts of Fauré’s
tandem in recent years—engaging, warmly phrased with winsome earnestness,
unhurried, yet certainly not lacking for momentum...
the musicians love what they’re doing. You will, too... certainly
recommended. "
Fanfare ~
May/June 2009
"[A]
fine American recording: humble, simple, direct, winsome... the sound is very
good."
American
Record Guide ~
May/June 2009
"There
is something humble and direct about these performances. It is very winsome. But
all you need to know is this is competitive with the best, beautifully recorded,
and well worth hearing."
Donald
Vroon, American
Record Guide ~ March/April 2009
"This
recording [of Faure's Quartet No.1] does much to sustain the buoyancy intrinsic
in the writing. One is particularly persuaded by the ease of the ensemble to
guide the ear... The Second Quartet derives great mobility from the ensemble's
firmly etched melodies... this recording has a remarkable consistency of
animation, the string playing achieving a sonority and rare joie de vivre and
the pianist threading into the texture with complete authority."
International
Record Review ~ March 2009
"The
Adaskin Trio...along with Israeli
pianist Sally Pinkas, turn in first-class readings of Fauré’s Piano Quartets
(1293)."
"[an]
excellent release...performed with trademark vibrancy by the Adaskin String Trio. The piano performance of Israeli-born Sally
Pinkas on this album is nothing short of remarkable. Her impressive list of
achievements merely acts as a backdrop to a performance of passion, precision,
and perfection. The
Adaskin String Trio’s enchanting performance of both compositions underlines
their reputation. The trio radiate
an authority based upon sound knowledge, appreciation, and understanding of the
music at hand. There
is a powerful magnetism to the overall effect which shines forth from these two
beautiful compositions...This
is an album that contains some of Faure’s most absorbing and satisfying music.
Exquisitely performed and recorded it is a true joy to experience."
Jeff Perkins, BlogCritics ~ February 2009
"...after
these ferociously gorgeous Faure readings, I want to know [the Adaskin Trio and
Sally Pinkas] much better."
Audiophile Audition ~ January 2009
"The
Adaskin String Trio’s new recording with Sally Pinkas for MSR Classics is
worth celebrating for several reasons. First of all, the performance is
splendid. A comparison with the 1992 Ma-Stern-Laredo-Ax recording of the
quartets (Sony) stymied me when ít came to a preference. These Canadian
string players (two of whom now teach at the Hartt School of Music in Hartford)
and the wonderful Dartmouth-based pianist, Sally Pinkas, are a well-knit
ensemble and play with passion as well as precision. MSR’s recording
creates a warmer ambience than Sony’s and gives the Adaskin’s strings a more
even texture, beautifully captured by a fine local label – that's another
thing to celebrate!"
D.
Perkins, Classical Voice of New England ~ December 2008
*
* *
The ADASKIN STRING TRIO has
won over audiences internationally with exuberant and stirring performances.
Their playing has been hailed for "vigor, precision and stylistic
certitude" (Charleston Gazette) as well as "spontaneity,
intensity and charm" (Peninsula Review) and the Boston Globe
praises them for "directing the listener to the heart of the matter."
Formed in 1994, the trio performs extensively throughout the United States and
Canada, and has appeared at Merkin Concert Hall in New York, the Corcoran
Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., and in Boston, Los Angeles, Montreal,
Nashville, Pittsburgh, Santa Barbara and Chicago. In addition, the Trio’s
concerts have been regularly recorded for broadcast by CBC Radio, Radio-Canada
and National Public Radio.
This dynamic ensemble commands a
large string trio repertoire ranging from Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven to
Dohnanyi, Rozsa, Villa-Lobos, Schnittke, and composers of today including
commissioned works by Murray Adaskin, Robert Carl and David Macbride among
others. In addition, the trio enjoys collaborations of the highest level with
various artists. The Trio and pianist Sally Pinkas have established themselves
as powerful interpreters of numerous masterpieces from piano quartet literature.
Other collaborators have included oboist Thomas Gallant, guitarist Eliot Fisk,
bassist Robert Black, and accordion virtuoso Joseph Petric with whom they
commissioned Raymond Luedeke to write a new work entitled Tango Dreams.
Previous recordings include the complete Beethoven String Trios on the Musica
Omnia label which won acclaim in the press.
Although the Adaskin String Trio is
currently based in New England, the members are all originally from Canada. They
met in Montreal where they each studied chamber music with founding Orford
Quartet cellist Marcel Saint-Cyr, and later completed two years as
ensemble-in-residence at The Hartt School under
the guidance of the Emerson Quartet. The Trio is named in honor of Murray
Adaskin, one of Canada's most loved and respected composers, and two of his
brothers, violinist Harry Adaskin and producer and music educator John Adaskin.
*
* *
Emlyn Ngai
is Concertmaster of Tempesta di Mare and Associate Concertmaster of the Carmel
Bach Festival. In 1995, he won First Prize on baroque violin at the Locatelli
Concours Amsterdam, and has since given recitals in the United States, Canada
and Europe. He has been on faculty at McGill University and Boston University
and currently teaches violin and early music at The Hartt School of the
University of Hartford in Connecticut.
Violist Steve Larson has
performed throughout North America, Europe, Japan and China and has appeared as
a guest with ensembles such as the Emerson and Miami String Quartets. Since
1998, he has taught at The Hartt School where he also serves as Chair for
Chamber Music. The year before joining the Hartt faculty he won second prize at
the Lionel Tertis International Viola Competition in the UK, receiving the
special award for his performance of the commissioned work. He is also a member
of the Avery Ensemble, a group renowned for both passionate playing and
imaginative programming of a wide variety of repertoire.
Mark Fraser
holds degrees from McGill University, l'Université de Montréal, and The Hartt
School and studied violoncello with Walter Joachim, Aldo Parisot and Yuli
Turovsky. For many years he was the Artistic Director of Project Renaissance, an
arts festival near Montreal. He is an active recitalist in eastern Canada and
the United States. Recording credits include a disc of works by J.S. Bach,
Schumann and Prokofiev with pianist Sooka Wang.
*
* *
Israeli-born pianist SALLY
PINKAS follows an active performing career, encompassing a wide repertoire
as well as a passion for chamber music and teaching. She has presented recitals
at London’s Wigmore Hall, Italy’s Villa Serbelloni and Villa Aurelia, for
Israel Radio Etnachta Series, in Bulgaria, France and throughout the United
States. Concerto work includes appearances with the Boston Pops, Aspen
Philharmonia, Jupiter Symphony, Tallahassee Symphony Orchestra and Dobrich
Chamber Orchestra in Bulgaria. US summer festival credits include Rockport,
Music Mountain, Marlboro, Tanglewood and Aspen, and abroad Kfar Blum (Israel),
Rocca di Mezzo (Italy) and Pontlevoy (France).
Pinkas' repertoire ranges from the
traditional to the contemporary, and includes many works written for her. In
1996, she was awarded a Howard Fellowship by Brown University for a 2-disc
recording of George Rochberg’s solo piano works, released by Gasparo. She has
also recorded Debussy’s Twelve Etudes and Estampes (Centaur), Bread
and Roses: Piano works by Christian Wolff (Mode), and Fauré’s Thirteen
Nocturnes (Musica Omnia), which was named one of 2002's best CD’s by
Richard Dyer of The Boston Globe.
In chamber music collaborations
with the Ciompi, Leontovych, Cuarteto Latinoamericano, Biava and Lydian String
Quartets, Pinkas has established herself as a compelling partner. Since 1992,
the Hirsch-Pinkas Piano Duo (with her husband Evan Hirsch) has performed
throughout the United States as well as in China, Nigeria, Russia, Israel,
Italy, France and Bulgaria, accepting return engagements at many of the venues.
The Duo has commissioned, premiered and recorded works by George Rochberg,
Daniel Pinkham, Thomas Oboe Lee and Peter Child for the Gasparo, Arsis and
Albany labels. Other regular partners include flutist Fenwick Smith, with whom
Pinkas has released a 3-disc set featuring the works of Gaubert (Naxos), and the
Adaskin String Trio.
Trained in the US, Pinkas holds
performance degrees from Indiana University and the New England Conservatory of
Music, and a PhD in Composition and Theory from Brandeis University.
Pianist-in-residence at the Hopkins Center at Dartmouth College, she is also
Professor of Music at Dartmouth's Music Department, and an Artist-teacher at the
Longy School of Music in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
INSTRUMENTARIUM
Violin: Louis Guersan,
Paris (ca.1750)
Viola: Roy Morgan, Chicago (ca.1930-40)
Violoncello: Nestor Audinot, Paris (1895)
Piano: Hamburg Steinway D