52 Sumner, Springfield, MA
October 26, 2024
by Michael J. Moran
Tonight’s concert marked this ensemble’s debut performance at its new venue, 52 Sumner. Located a short distance from Route 91, at 52 Sumner Avenue in Springfield, it provides ample free parking in a lot directly across Sumner Avenue with a traffic light and crossing signal. A former church built in 1894, now extensively renovated, 52 Sumner offers comfortable seating for up to 400 people, new sound and lighting systems, and warm yet clear acoustics.
The performers are all musicians of the Springfield Symphony Orchestra: principal clarinet Christopher Cullen; violinist Masako Yanagita, SSO Concertmaster for over 40 years; violinist Miho Matsuno, an SSO member since 1992; and violist Ellen Gronningen and cellist Patricia Edens, both associate SSO members. Their long experience playing together was evident in their warm rapport and technical cohesion.
Their program opened with a piece for the full ensemble: an affectionate and sensitive reading of the 1926 “Six Studies in English Folk Song,” by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Each lasting two minutes or less, and mostly in slow tempos, they quote and then briefly elaborate on traditional melodies. The suite made a delightful concert opener, especially the rousing finale, based on “As I Walked over London Bridge.”
The next two pieces featured the four string players. First came the two inner movements of Alexander Borodin’s popular 1881 String Quartet No. 2 in D Major, both used in the 1953 Forrest and Wirght musical “Kismet:” a playful “Scherzo,” and a gorgeous “Nocturne.” These were followed by jazzy arrangements for string quartet by Paul Chihara, in his “Ellington Fantasy," of two songs by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn: a shimmering “Mood Indigo,” and an intricate “Sophisticated Lady.”
The concert ended with a rhapsodic account by the full ensemble of the 1967 clarinet quintet “Souvenirs de Voyage” (“Memories of Travel”), by Bernard Herrmann. Best known for the film scores he wrote for Alfred Hitchcock, Herrmann brought cinematic colors to this picturesque piece: a dramatic “Andante pastorale – Allegro,” a lilting Irish-inspired “Berceuse,” and a lively Italian-flavored “Andante tranquillo quasi barcarolla,” with a catchy tarantella rhythm.
Informative spoken comments by Cullen and Matsuno heightened audience engagement in this intimate space. Next up is “Johnny Appleseed Plus,” featuring Clifton J. Noble, Jr., on December 8.