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Light in Transformation


Details

Orchestra For People full profile / String Sextet / 8 musicians

Other players: Shaleah Feinstein, Sohui Yun, Andy Park, Sandro Sidamonidze, Tommy Wu


Full program notes

The Adagio e lento of Mendelssohn’s String Quintet No. 2 stands at the emotional center of the work. Written in 1845, near the end of the composer’s life, the movement reflects a deepened introspection and a maturity of expression that distinguishes Mendelssohn’s late chamber music from the youthful brilliance often associated with his earlier works.

Scored for two violins, two violas, and cello, the movement unfolds with a rich, dark sonority. A grave, chorale-like opening sets a mood of quiet introspection, shaped by long, sustained lines and subtle inner voices rather than dramatic contrast. As the music moves into the lento, time seems to slow, and the intimate dialogue—especially among the inner voices—deepens the sense of contemplative stillness.

Often compared to a prayer or a meditative hymn, the movement reveals a side of Mendelssohn that is deeply personal and expressive. Its restrained beauty and emotional depth offer a moment of profound calm within the quintet, reminding us that beneath Mendelssohn’s elegance and clarity lies a composer capable of remarkable spiritual and emotional intensity.

Composed in 1899, Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night) marks a pivotal moment in Arnold Schoenberg’s early career, standing at the threshold between late Romanticism and the radical musical language he would later develop. Inspired by a poem of the same title by Richard Dehmel, the work unfolds as a single continuous movement, translating a deeply emotional narrative into richly expressive chamber music.

Scored originally for string sextet, Verklärte Nacht draws on the lush harmonic world of Wagner and Brahms while pushing chromaticism to its expressive limits. The music traces the poem’s nocturnal journey: a tense, troubled opening gives voice to confession and anguish, followed by a gradual transformation toward warmth, radiance, and release. Schoenberg’s use of dense textures, shifting harmonies, and sweeping melodic lines creates an atmosphere of intense psychological drama.

By the work’s conclusion, darkness gives way to transfiguration. The music resolves into a luminous calm, reflecting forgiveness and renewal. Though firmly rooted in the Romantic tradition, Verklärte Nacht already reveals Schoenberg’s fearless emotional honesty and his willingness to challenge musical boundaries, making it one of the most powerful and enduring works in the chamber music repertoire.


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