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Austin360 blogs > Austin Arts: Seeing Things > Archives > 2008 > April > 14 > Entry

Review: Austin Chamber Music’s Long Center debut

If you have the talent to show off, why not do so?

That’s what Austin Chamber Music Center did for its flourishing debut at the new Long Center for the Performing Art’s Rollins Studio Theatre Sunday night.

In a program of three virtuosic — and demanding — pieces, ACMC artistic director Michelle Schumann and guests — violinist Sonja Braaten and cellist Martha Baldwin, both of the Cleveland Orchectra — impressed a near-capacity audience that rewarded with an enthusiastic standing ovation at concert’s end.

And what was there not to be utterly impressed with? Schumann and Braaten opened with Beethoven’s mighty Kreutzer Sonata and deftly interpreted the piece’s vast scale, coaxing great nuance from a score that sweeps in mood from furious to meditative and joyously exuberant.

Schumann showed her whip-smart sense of programming with the surprising Ravel Sonata for Violin and Cello, an untypical Ravel piece with tonal austerity that nevertheless radiated with a kind of modernist lyricism and undeniable vigor.

In a testament to sheer power and endurance that this trio of female musicians displayed, the concert concluded with Tchaikovsky’s demanding Piano Trio in A minor. The undeniably dramatic work — about 40 minutes in length — builds from a dirge-like romantic opening into a series of increasingly complex and ecstatic variations before ending in a quiet yet moving funereal march. And Schumann and company crafted it to be equal parts breathtaking technique and passionate emotion.

Schumann made the forward-thinking decision to be the first of Austin’s not-major classical groups to use the new $77 million downtown performing arts center as its principal concert venue.

To be sure, the Rollins Studio Theatre isn’t as ideal acoustically for classical music as the Long Center’s Dell Hall is. Dell Hall sparkles with clarity and warmth. Rollins is fine, but a bit dry; the vibrant halo of sound doesn’t hold and linger the way that it does in Dell Hall. But the Rollins’ sophisticated (and comfortable) setting lends a refreshing urban aura to a centuries-old musical genre.

Before Sunday night’s concert, the Rollins lobby made a commodious and attractive venue for a short concert by a brass quintet from ACMC’s community music school. Afterward, audience members lingered to chat with the performers.

Welcome to chamber music’s chamber for the 21st century.


Michelle Schumann in the Rollins Studio Theatre. Photo by Riccardo Brazziell.

Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment Categories: Long Center, Reviews

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By Patricia Paredes

April 14, 2008 8:44 PM | Link to this

The Austin Chamber Music Center and Michelle Schumann deserve much applause — I hope to see them perform more frequently at The Long.

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