Vol. XXIV No. 2
October 2008

Anniversary Concert Revisits Classics and Commissions

This season marks my 40th year as the violist of the Juilliard String Quartet and as a faculty member of The Juilliard School. I thought that an appropriate way to celebrate would be to give a recital right here at the School featuring works that were written for me and some classics of the repertoire with which I have been long associated. The time span of the works I have chosen (1921-2007) gives a very good idea of the musical depth, technical scope, and special qualities of the viola repertoire of the 20th and early 21st centuries.

Milton Babbitt with violist Samuel Rhodes (in a publicity shot for Rhodes's faculty recital in 1990, which included the premiere of Babbitt's Play It Again, Sam). (Photo by David Archer)

Three of the works on the program—Three Sad Songs by Donald Martino, Play It Again, Sam by Milton Babbitt, and Figment IV by Elliott Carter—were written for me. The Martino was commissioned by the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation at the Library of Congress in Washington in 1993. For more than 40 years, the Juilliard String Quartet was in residence at the Library, and has played innumerable contemporary works (and especially American ones), many of which were world premieres. As a token of his appreciation, the chief of the Library’s music division at that time, James Pruett, offered to commission a solo work for each quartet member from a composer of our choice. Robert Mann chose Sophia Gubaidulina; Joel Smirnoff picked Robert Stern; Joel Krosnick asked his longtime friend, Ralph Shapey; and I, being tremendously impressed by the extremely complex but expressive Fourth Quartet of Martino, awarded him with the commission. The result was the Three Sad Songs, which I premiered at the Library in 1997 with pianist Thomas Sauer. The work features the meditative, reflective, and sometimes severe qualities of the viola, with the piano providing punctuation. The beginning of the third “Song” is a cadenza for viola, which gets quite excited for a moment and then dies away into a Webern-like finish.

The Babbitt  and Carter works represent the two most incredible gifts I have ever received. Both are shining examples of the mature styles of two of America’s greatest creative geniuses. I gave the premieres of Play It Again, Sam (1989) here at Juilliard in 1990 ... and I say “premieres” because, on that occasion, I took the direction stated in the title very literally and performed the piece twice: once before and once after intermission. Babbitt’s style is kaleidoscopic; he takes all the parameters of music—pitch, rhythm, dynamics, register, timbre, etc.—and continually mixes them in a way that creates ever-varied, subtly related, fantastic shapes that are shuffled and reshuffled. The effect is sometimes whimsical and sometimes agitated, like a small universe in constant motion. This kind of quick, ever-varying juxtaposition makes the work a formidable challenge for the player.

The Carter Figment IV was presented to me in the summer of 2007, and I was totally and overwhelmingly surprised to receive it. It is the fourth in a series of works for solo lower string instruments (Figments I and II are for cello, and III is for double bass). I gave the premiere in Paris at the Cité de la Musique in January 2008. There are three major elements that are developed: a quick, two-note figure that begins and ends the piece and appears as a motive at crucial moments; a long, intensely expressive line that weaves its way throughout; and flurries of passagework, which interrupt the melodic line from time to time.

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Event Information
Samuel Rhodes, violist 40th Anniversary Recital

Paul Hall
Thursday, Oct. 23, 8 p.m.

Free tickets available in the Juilliard Box Office beginning Oct. 10.