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1 ERNEST BLOCH music for viola and piano Paul Neubauer, viola Margo Garrett, piano DE 3498

Ernest Bloch Music for Viola and Piano Suite for Viola and Piano (1919) Suite for Viola Solo (1958) Suite Hébraïque (1951) Meditation and Processional (1951) Total playing Time: 56:27 Paul Neubauer, viola Margo Garrett, piano

Ernest Bloch Music for Viola and Piano PAUL NEUBAUER, viola MARGO GARRETT, piano Suite for Viola and Piano (30:10) 1. Lento - Allegro- Moderato (12:12) 2. Allegro ironico (5:10) 3. Lento (4:41) 4. Molto vivo (8:06) Suite for Viola Solo (8:06) 5. Andante - Moderato - Andante - Allegro deciso Suite Hébraïque for Viola and Piano (12:17) 6. Rapsodie (6:25) 7. Processional (2:03) 8. Affirmation (3:49) Meditation and Processional for Viola and Piano (5:54) 9. Meditation (3:44) 10. Processional (2:10) Total Playing Time: 56:27 About the Cover: The lighthouse at Agate Beach, Oregon. Bloch spent the last years of his life at Agate Beach, where he composed Suite Hébraïque and Meditation and Processional as well as the unfinished Suite for Viola Solo. Bloch collected agates and polished them in a tumbler; some of his guests remarked on the constant, soothing sound of the stones rolling around in the tumbler. Photograph by Brad Templeton. 2

I n 2001, over the course of three days, we immersed ourselves in the world of Ernest Bloch and recorded all of his works that feature the viola and piano. The preparation and concentration that a recording requires is immense and we were disheartened to hear that the digital audio tapes that were used for this recording were lost. Many years later those tapes resurfaced and we were thrilled that the tapes were not only salvageable but featured playing that we feel best represents our efforts to bring these works to life. Paul Neubauer and Margo Garrett, February 2018 A voice vaster and deeper than any spoken language, Ernest Bloch wrote, referring to the cello, but equally applicable to the viola, an instrument close to his heart and for which he composed the array of pieces presented here in masterful performances by violist Paul Neubauer and pianist Margo Garrett. Born in Switzerland, Bloch first came to the United States in 1916. By that time he had completed several pieces known as his Jewish Cycle, and he quickly established a reputation as a Jewish composer. This reputation was reinforced when his publisher, G. Schirmer, decorated editions of Bloch s pieces with the six-pointed Star of David. However, Bloch was much too individualistic to be characterized as simply a Jewish composer. Although he was influenced by Jewish music and wrote many pieces on Jewish themes, he was also influenced by Romanticism, Impressionism, neoclassicism, and American music in its multiple styles. In many of Bloch s works, he blends these various influences into an approach that is both personal and universal. In addition to his activities as a composer, Bloch had a celebrated career as a teacher. He was the first director of the Cleveland Institute of Music (from 1920 to 1925) and director of the San Francisco Conservatory from 1925 to 1930. He also taught at the University of California at Berkeley before retiring to Agate Beach, Oregon. Bloch s many students included Quincy Porter, George Antheil, Leon Kirchner, and Roger Sessions. The great variety of styles in which these composers wrote attests to Bloch s ability to encourage his students to bring out their individual voices. He neither expected nor wanted them to compose music that sounded like his, just as he said of his own compositions: I cannot adopt the expressions of others. The Suite for Viola and Piano was awarded first prize in the Berkshire Chamber Music

Festival Competition in 1919. (The Sonata for Viola and Piano by Rebecca Clarke received second prize). About Bloch s Suite, Oscar Sonneck, editor of The Musical Quarterly, declared that Bloch has given us the greatest work for viola in musical literature, and what is more important, one of the most significant and powerful works of our time. Bloch wrote that a vision of the Far East Java, Sumatra, and Borneo inspired this four-movement work. The viola enters in the third measure of the piece with a phrase that reaches out and takes hold of the listener. Bloch himself described the beginning of the piece as a kind of savage cry, like that of a fierce bird of prey. Marked misterioso in its initial iteration, this theme returns at the end of the piece s last movement with a new piano accompaniment that matches the final movement s energetic cheerfulness. Inspired by J. S. Bach s suites for solo cello and his sonatas and partitas for solo violin, Bloch composed three suites for solo cello and two suites for unaccompanied violin. In addition, he was working on the Suite for Viola Solo when he died. Although composers most often employ individual stringed instruments to execute a single line or melody, in the Suite for Viola Solo, Bloch implies harmonies and counterpoint much like Bach did in his works for solo strings, giving the pieces a full sound in spite of the instruments limitation of four strings. Dating from 1958, the Suite for Viola Solo consists of four interconnected movements played without pause. The music breaks off rather abruptly as Bloch was unable to finish the piece because of his final illness. Bloch s seventieth birthday in 1950 was celebrated in Chicago with a week-long festival of his music. In appreciation of the Chicago Covenant Club, which had been one of the sponsors, Bloch composed a group of five pieces for viola and piano, originally called Five Jewish Pieces. Completed in 1951, the five pieces were reconfigured into two independent works and published separately. Three of the pieces became Suite Hébraïque and the remaining two pieces were published as Meditation and Processional. The Suite Hébraïque opens with the Rapsodie, which is improvisatory at times. Bloch mingles major and minor tonalities and traditional Jewish modalities, which often employ the minor third, minor sixth, and augmented second. The last movement was renamed Affirmation when the Suite Hébraïque was spun off from the five pieces. The viola begins Meditation and Processional with a pensive solo melody and is joined by the piano in counterpoint. Arching melodies are decorated with traditional Jewish ornaments. The piece concludes with a stately Processional.

Websites for the International Ernest Bloch Society (www.ernestblochsociety.org) and the Ernest Bloch Legacy (www.ernestbloch. org) have more information about Bloch and his music. David Brin Violist Paul Neubauer s exceptional musicality and effortless playing distinguish him as one of this generation s quintessential artists. He was Principal Violist of the New York Philharmonic for six years, joining at age twenty-one as the youngest principal string player in the Philharmonic s history. Featured on CBS s Sunday Morning, A Prairie Home Companion, and in Strad, Strings, and People magazines, he has premiered concertos by Béla Bartók (a revised version of the Viola Concerto), Joel Phillip Friedman, Reinhold Glière, Gordon Jacob, Aaron Jay Kernis, Henri Lazarof, Detlev Müller-Siemens, David Ott, Krzysztof Penderecki, Tobias Picker, Richard Suter, and Joan Tower. He has performed as soloist with more than one hundred orchestras including the New York, Los Angeles, Helsinki, and Royal Liverpool Philharmonics; Chicago, National, St. Louis, Dallas, Detroit, San Francisco, and Bournemouth Symphonies; English Chamber, St. Paul Chamber, Los

Angeles Chamber, Beethovenhalle, and Santa Cecilia Orchestras. A two-time Grammy nominee, he has recorded on numerous record labels including Delos, Decca, Deutsche Grammophon, RCA Red Seal, and Sony Classical. He performs in a trio with soprano Susanna Phillips and pianist Anne-Marie Mc- Dermott. Mr. Neubauer is the artistic director of the Mostly Music series in New Jersey and is on the faculty of The Juilliard School and Mannes College. For more information, please visit www.paulneubauer.com. Deutsche Grammophon (1992 Grammy for Best Vocal Recital), Dorian, Nonesuch, Orion, and Sony Classical. A noted teacher, Ms. Garrett who is a founding faculty member of The Juilliard School s Collaborative Piano Program is looking forward to her twenty-second summer at the Tanglewood Music Center, and continues to present frequent classes internationally at leading schools of music and festivals. Pianist Margo Garrett has been Paul Neubauer s recital and trio partner (with clarinetist David Shifrin and various singers) for many years after they were introduced by her friend, noted violist and Mr. Neubauer s godfather, Paul Doktor. Ms. Garrett has also enjoyed long performing relationships with violinists Jaime Laredo and Daniel Phillips, cellists Sharon Robinson and the late Stephen Kates, singers Kathleen Battle, Barbara Bonney, the late Judith Raskin, Lucy Shelton, Dawn Upshaw, Benita Valente, Shirley Close, and Anthony Dean Griffey. Ms. Garrett has premiered thirty-four major works and has received ASCAP awards for her creative programming. Her most recent Delos recording (Colors of Feelings, DE 3428), featuring songs and vocal chamber music of Philip Lasser, with sopranos Elizabeth Futral, Susanna Phillips, and narrator Michael York, was released in 2013. She has also recorded for CRI,

Recorded at the Sonic Temple, Roslyndale, Massachusetts, March 16 18, 2001. Executive Producer: Carol Rosenberger Recording Producer: Ransom Wilson Engineer: Paul Blakemore Editing and Mastering: David Merrill Mastering: Matthew Snyder Booklet editing: David Brin, Anne Maley, and Lindsay Koob Graphic design and layout: Lonnie Kunkel Photo of Paul Neubauer: Tristan Cook Photo of Margo Garrett: Tom Foley The artists wish to thank Ransom Wilson and Paul Blakemore for their guidance during the original recording sessions and to David Merrill for his expertise in transferring the digital audio tapes and editing of these works. They would also like to thank Delos for their commitment to this project. These albums with Paul Neubauer, viola, are also available from Delos: Chamber Music of Debussy, DE 3167 Beethoven in New York, DE 3177 Bartók / Kodály / Dohnányi Chamber Works DE 3151 2018 Delos Productions, Inc., P.O. Box 343, Sonoma, CA 95476-9998 (707) 996-3844 (800) 364-0645 contactus@delosmusic.com www.delosmusic.com Made in USA

DE 3498 8