Bergmann Duo with Sarah Hagen

Review: Three Pianists Negotiate One Piano Keyboard – Beautifully!

Bergmann Duo with Sarah Hagen
Bergmann Duo with Sarah Hagen on Monday April 8th, 2019 at The Vernon & District Performing Arts Centre

Review by Jim Leonard

In spite of the concert being on a Monday night in April, spirits were not dampened! The recently formed quintet comprised of members from 13-20 years of age called “Appassionato,” owned the stage with their enthusiastic version of a Schumann piano quintet.The pianist Henry Baker provided a stable and virtuosic line throughout the composition. There was an effective dialogue between Anton Baker’s viola part and thirteen year old Adam Kunyk’s cello part. Emily Kunyk and Emily Baker provided rock solid solidity in the tempo on their respective violins. I would like to hear this group present a whole concert; their sound was rich and warm.

Marcel and Elizabeth Bergmann and Sarah Hagen showed both their versatility and virtuosity throughout this concert which featured music for left hand alone by Marcel Bergmann and music for two to six hands- all on one piano! The pieces for six hands required some very creative seating arrangements – needless to say!

The Prelude for one hand (2019) by Marcel Bergmann began with random bell tone chords. Then a constant ostinato (repeated rhythmic and melodic pattern) was added in the middle giving the effect of two hands playing! Sarah Hagen took the stage to represent two hands playing. She masterfully played three Rachmaninoff Preludes ( #6,7,8 ) from his Opus 32. Each had a varying character: #6 was “stormy” and restless; #7 was like a Russian “Sesame Street” (in Sarah’s words); #8 was effervescent. All were difficult but well played.

The avant garde “Hippocratic Oath” by Mauricio Kagel (1931-2008) – an Argentinian-German composer who developed a theatrical style in his music – was actually written for three hands. One of the hands slapped the bottom of the keyboard in an irregular rhythm at the beginning as if to be independent of the others. The piece ended, however, with all hands stacked together in the air as if to show unity.

After such a piece, the lightness and charm of some of Brahms Waltzes, played in duet form, gave the program a nice turn of events. This breath of fresh air continued with five hands playing Australian-U.S. composer Percy Grainger’s (1882-1961) Zanzibar Boat Song. The music was rich and tune filled; bringing up visions of a brisk sailing trip on a bright sunny day.
Chicago concert pianist-composer Andy Costello (b.1987) is a champion of the music of living composers. His piece “Balance” involved players leaving and returning to the piano to add their voice to the mix.At the climax of this piece, six hands were used (along with creative seating arrangements) to use most of the piano keyboard and create a dense blanket of sound. A rollicking arrangement of Rossini’s “Barber of Seville” by Henri Hausser ended the first half of the programme.

After the intermission,Sarah Hagen played a Piano Sonata in A major by Marianne von Martinez (1744-1812). She was an Austrian composer greatly influenced by the people she shared a house with. In the house (Michaelerplatz), which had four floors, lived a princess from the Esterhazy family; Nicola Porpora – a singing teacher; The Martines family; and in the cold leaky attic, Joseph Haydn. Their lives ultimately became connected through their involvement with Marianna (Porpora taught her voice; Haydn was the accompanist etc). Marianna was the only woman to have written a symphony during the Classic Period. Her Sonata #3 is very much in the style of Haydn and Mozart, with two fast movements divided by a beautiful melancholic Andante movement.

The programme continued with a duet version of three selections from Bernstein’s “West Side Story” with special attention to the haunting “One Hand, One Heart” being the favourite for this reviewer. “ Libertango” by Argentinian composer Astor Piazolla (1921-1992) with it’s infectious rhythms played by four hands; “Romance and Waltz” by Rachmaninoff (1873-1943) using six hands; and the “Radetzky March” by Strauss-also with six hands- were much appreciated by the audience. A hilarious encore which left Marcel Bergmann without a piano part; and resigned to sing like a dejected Cuckoo, with the ladies at the piano; topped off a wonderful evening.

The next NOCCA concert will feature Vox Humana Chamber Choir from Victoria, BC presenting a versatile mix from established to newly commissioned choral repertoire on Saturday April 27, 2019 at 7:30 pm. More info at nocca.ca.

Review by Jim Leonard for the Vernon Morning Star.

Bergman Duo and Sarah Hagen

Bergmann Duo with Sarah Hagen – Monday April 8, 2019

Bergman Duo and Sarah HagenBergmann Duo + Sarah Hagen
Monday April 8, 2019 7:30 pm
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Bergmann Duo with Sarah Hagen – known for their extraordinary keyboard skills, inspired and virtuosic performances, impeccable musicianship, and uniquely original voice, the Bergmann Duo combines forces with Sarah Hagen for an exceptional 1 piano, 6 hands acrobatic musical spectacle on the NOCCA Steinway piano!

A trio of long-time friends, Sarah Hagen of Morning Melodies and the Bergmann Duo of Elizabeth and Marcel, decided a few years ago to have a different kind of fun and see how one piano could manage their collective talents. With musical careers, teaching and domiciles not always coinciding, practice times as a trio were a challenge and performances were even rarer.

NOCCA presented the Bergmann Duo in April of 2015, and the audience was delighted and amazed with their unique combination of warmth, humour and virtuosity. They have performed and received accolades from around the globe and we will hear again how the musical world is their oyster. Not only have they won numerous international competitions, but they have continued to promote the musical talent of other artists through their teaching posts both past and present. The Duo serve as Directors of the Langley Community Music School and are Associate Music Directors of White Rock Concerts.

Sarah Hagen is one extremely talented young lady who many of us know from her “Morning Melodies” presentations in the Marie Fleming Hall at the Performing Arts Centre. She also performed with her friend, tenor Benjamin Butterfield, on NOCCA’s stage in February of 2017. In January 2018, she hosted NOCCA’s youth concert NOYSE and presented her solo production of “Perk Up, Pianist”. Sarah’s quest for inspiration has taken her around the world, and will continue to do so as her inspiration is “everything”. Her sensitive interpretations of the classics to experimentation in musical theatre are indicative of her multiple talents.

One interesting side note to the Bergmann Duo and Sarah playing here in Vernon is that they were all “instrumental” in the selection of NOCCA’s Steinway. Sarah played the piano in the workshop in White Rock before restoration began in order to give NOCCA a performer’s opinion as to its pedigree. Elizabeth and Marcel played the piano in White Rock after the restoration was complete to confirm that the instrument was up to standard, and as we who have heard it well know, the work was done to perfection.

With backgrounds as varied and as richly talented, trying to describe the upcoming concert comes to two words: “Fabulously eclectic”. To quote Marcel and Elizabeth, be prepared for “a full evening of brain work” and “an experience in the negotiation of keyboard gymnastics”. The program features composers such as Ravel, Rachmaninoff, Brahms, Grainger as well as avant-gardist Mauricio Kagel and, to keep things current, Marcel Bergmann. bergmannduo.com and sarahhagen.com

The concert will be opened by the quintet Appassionato. Ranging in ages 13-20, Appassionato is a new, vibrant, and energetic group rising up in the Okanagan. They began their quintet in October and have been rehearsing and sharing music everywhere they go, whether that be in a concert or a masterclass. The group’s desire is to share their love for classical music and have a lot of fun doing it! The members are Henry Baker (15) piano, Emily Kunyk (15) violin, Emily Baker (20) violin, Anton Baker (18) viola and Adam Kunyk (13) cello.

Click on the image/link below to view short videos of the artists performing:

Sarah Hagen – piano

Bergmann Duo – piano duet

SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS
Adults – $40  Under 18 – $20
Students on the 8to12 program – $5

Purchase tickets at:

TICKET SELLER
Phone: (250) 549-SHOW (7469)
E-mail: boxoffice@ticketseller.ca

– or –

Visit The Performing Arts Centre Foyer
3800-34th Street, Vernon
All concerts are held in the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre.

Alysha Black plays Bruch's Violin Concerto in D Minor

Concert Review: Bergmann Duo show that four hands are better than two

Alysha Black plays Bruch's Violin Concerto in D Minor
Alysha Black plays Bruch’s Violin Concerto in D Minor before the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s presentation of the Bergmann Duo, at the Performing Arts Centre.
— image credit: Christine Pilgrim

By Christine Pilgrim – Vernon Morning Star

Sixty years ago, it was common to see a piano in a living room, with a stash of music nearby.

Many of us stumbled through that music while others became more proficient and some even experienced the thrill of finishing on the same beat in a duet. But none, save perhaps a precious few, could even come close to the skill with which Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann (of the Bergmann Duo) entertained at the North Okanagan Community Concert Association’s penultimate concert of the 2014/15 season.

The precision, proficiency and unity with which they played contrasted sharply with their easy style and sense of competitive fun when they introduced the pieces.

A case in point was their introduction to the fifth of Maurice Ravel’s fairytale tunes written for his friends’ children in his Mother Goose Suite (Ma Mere l’Oye). It was entitled Conversations of Beauty and the Beast.

“I’ll play Beauty; you can be the Beast,” said Elizabeth to her husband as he picked up her translation from the French text that accompanied the tune.

When the Beast (Marcel) protested his love for Beauty (Elizabeth) she suggested in true wifely fashion that he could show more feeling. Both then proceeded to do exactly that on NOCCA’s celebrated, soon-to-retire Steinway grand.

Friday’s program opened with Variations on a Theme of Robert Schumann Opus 23. Johannes Brahms wrote them after Schumann’s attempted suicide and subsequent insistence that he be admitted to an asylum near the family’s Dusseldorf home. The variations’ haunting sadness reflects Brahms’ feelings of loss and admiration for his friend and mentor. And the Bergmanns’ sensitive interpretation paid tribute to both great composers.

There followed four of six little pieces (Six Morceaux Opus 11) by Sergei Rachmaninoff.  The Bergmanns didn’t include Chanson Russe, based on an obscure Russian folk song, nor Romance, which might have been too cloying for these light-hearted lovers. But the remaining four compensated royally, with Barcarolle in G Minor. (Its rich, mysterious tones reminded its publisher of “a gondolier navigating Venetian canals beneath a moonlit sky.”)  A sprightly Scherzo led to an intense Valse that provoked the duo to sway in rhythm as their hands flew over the keys and flicked through the pages of music. The Morceaux ended with the monumentally majestic Slava.

The Bergmann Duo did equal justice to Czech composer Erwin Schulhoff’s two “morceaux” from his Dadaesque Ironien Opus 34.  Schulhoff was one of the first Europeans to weave jazz into classical music but his place in musical history was cut short by his untimely death in Wultzburg Concentration Camp in the 1940s.

The program ended with Henry Levine’s arrangement of George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, which brought the house down… and up, in an inevitable standing ovation.

The Bergmanns’ virtuosity shone again in their encore, when they tangoed on both keyboard and piano stool in perfect time, tune and harmony. That tango, once described as “a vertical expression of a horizontal intent,” left no more to be said except that this month’s curtain raiser, Max Bruch’s Concerto in D Minor, was beautifully performed by local violinist Alysha Black, accompanied by Arnold Draper.

A slightly shaky beginning did not diminish the depth of feeling with which this gifted young musician interpreted Bruch’s intricate work.

It’s no wonder the B.C. Touring Council nominated NOCCA as presenter of the year. Its final concert this season features the Elektra Women’s Choir at the Vernon Performing Arts Centre May 23, 2015.

Freelance writer Christine Pilgrim reviews NOCCA’s concert season for the Vernon Morning Star.

Bergmann Piano Duo

BERGMANN DUO – piano, Friday April 24, 2015

Bergmann Piano Duo
Bergmann Piano Duo

BERGMANN DUO – piano
Friday April 24, 2015 7:30 pm

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ELIZABETH and MARCEL BERGMANN are a duo – in marriage and in music. For more than two decades their energetic and eclectic keyboard concerts have inspired audiences around the world. They play with such passion it makes audiences hold their breath. As a result, they’ve been gathering accolades and awards along the way. Their incredible repertoire ranges from Bach to Bartok, Liszt to Gershwin, Schumann to Stravinsky. Always adventurous, the Bergmanns combine virtuosic dedication with the instincts of professional entertainers who love sharing their music with an audience. www.bergmannduo.com


4 Hands, 1 Piano – Concert Program:

J. Brahms
(1833-1897)
Variations on a Theme by Robert Schumann Op. 23
Rachmaninoff
(1873-1943)
4 pieces from Six Morceaux Op. 11
Intermission
M. Ravel
(1875-1937)
Mother Goose Suite (Ma Mère l’Oye)
E. Schulhoff
(1894-1942)
2 pieces from Ironien Op. 34
George Gershwin
(1898-1937)
Rhapsody in Blue (arr. H. Levine)

SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS
Adults – $35 Under 18 – $17.50
Students on the eyeGo program – $5

Purchase tickets at:

TICKET SELLER
Phone: (250) 549-SHOW (7469)
E-mail: boxoffice@ticketseller.ca

– or –

Visit The Performing Arts Centre Foyer
3800-34th Street, Vernon
All concerts are held in the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre.