It's not always that Schoenberg is out-weirded in a concert programme. More often, his is the eyebrow-raiser, the tougher music on display, which takes more effort to enjoy. But it's a sure sign of progress that a work like the string sextet Verlkärte Nacht (1899), whose première was apparently cancelled because of an overly dissonant inverted ninth chord, can sit so securely in a concert programme today. And actually, it was made to seem positively tame last night, placed next to Schubert's perpetually perplexing String Quintet (1828).
Janine Jansen's final concert in her Wigmore Hall residency saw her joined by a starry lineup of string players, including violist Maxim Rysanov and cellist Thorleif Thedéen. The group are in the process of touring this rich programme of music around Europe. They may lack a name, but the ensemble lacks little in terms of cohesion, and they played both works with a sense of care which suggested that the players' obvious individual excellence had been coupled with diligent preparation.
The group's sincerity of purpose was apparent from the off in Verklärte Nacht ('Transfigured Night'): they played the piece's gradual, soft opening incredibly delicately. It almost felt as if the relative inexperience of the group in playing together had heightened their awareness of the need to communicate. And the slight tension of their coordination was perfectly suited to the foreboding atmosphere this opening requires. They didn't disappoint as the piece developed either: the numerous climaxes were well controlled and the tricksy pizzicato sections played with preposterous facility. The denser contrapuntal sections felt less balanced, with a slightly decreased sense of whole, but actually this almost brought out the frenzied nature of Schoenberg's writing yet more.
It's a quirk of Verklärte Nacht that despite perceptible flaws in overall structure – the D major climax arrives so early that there is a little too much thumb-twiddling late on – it remains one of the most genuinely compelling listens in the chamber music repertoire. Such is the strange transparency with which Schoenberg interprets the poem by Richard Dehmel on which the piece is based. Jansen and her colleagues caught the work's inherent sense of drama perfectly, and the closing D major swell was an appropriately rich end to a deeply romantic piece.