This year’s highly imaginative programming of the Davos Festival fosters those emerging talents under a festival theme of the human senses. While under strict observance of social distancing guidelines, the fifth concert of the 2020 season featured works by Schubert, Beethoven, Liszt and Danzi. The SIBJA Saxophone Quartet launched the evening with the Allegro of Franz Schubert’s String Quartet no. 14 in D minor (“Death and the Maiden”). Widely considered a pillar of the chamber music repertoire, the work was composed in 1824, four years prior to Schubert’s own demise, and features booming calls and exhortations, anxious questions and pensive quietude, in short, those sentiments of gloom and mourning we most often associate with death.
The choice seemed somewhat incongruous for the four young players themselves, none of whom appeared to be much over 30. Nonetheless, all mastered the movement’s pregnant pauses, sudden attacks, and nuances in volume that are the work’s hallmarks, rendering the surprises with tremendous gusto, even as they ranged from abrupt stops to fully supple and relaxed passages. The quartet did the Allegro a tremendous honor, the score’s subtleties, sometimes even measured or signaled by the player’s eyebrows.
Ludwig van Beethoven’s Cello Sonata no. 3 in A major, Op.69 featured cellist Anton Spronk and pianist Frederic Bager, who proved a stunning musical pair. Spronk was light-handed enough on the bow to make the end of the second movement feel like Grace itself had fallen over the hall, and Bager’s piano was polished and highly refreshing. At last year’s festival, he was one of the many pianists here to play five minutes to a single listener in the so-called “Box”, a small, glass-sided festival pavilion just big enough to house a featured pianist, a Bösendorfer, and a chair for the lucky listener. Bager showed himself gifted then, so it was sheer pleasure to hear him in a full-length piece this summer.