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Living in Alto Clef
11 top players pick the best loved, and most overlooked, viola works of all time
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By Heather K. Scott

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4 VICTORIA CHIANG

Victoria Chiang is a founding member of the Aspen Ensemble Quintet, and is on the artist faculty at the Peabody Conservatory of Music and the Aspen Music Festival. Chiang has served on the faculty at the Juilliard School and Hartt School of Music, and she was a board member of the American Viola Society.


VICTORIA CHIANG
  • ALL-TIME FAVORITE—Concertpiece for Viola and Piano, George Enescu

    “This is one of my all-time favorite pieces,” Chiang says. “It is a work that demands virtuosity, lyricism, and elegance. It also is one of the few pieces for viola in the Romantic French style.”

  • MOST OVERLOOKED—Sinfonia Concertante for Violin and Viola, Ignaz Pleyel

    This is Chiang’s current favorite. “It is a beautiful piece in the classical style of Haydn and Mozart, with lovely melodic lines passed back and forth between violin and viola,” she says. “Violists need concertos! This is an effective work, and a wonderful complement to Mozart’s Sinfonia Concertante.”

    5 CAROL COOK

    As a native of Scotland, Carol Cook won her first Scottish fiddle competition at age eight and went on to make her concerto debut at 16. She was recently a member of Mark O’Connor’s Grammy Award–winning Appalachia Waltz Trio (along with cellist Natalie Haas). Cook has performed with the New York Philharmonic, the London and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. She’s a member of the Lyric Opera Orchestra and the Metamorphosen Chamber Orchestra.


    PHOTO CREDIT: CARPENTER TURNER, LONDON
    CAROL COOK

  • ALL-TIME FAVORITE—Sinfonia Concertante, K. 364, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

    “I have to say that, forced into a decision on my favorite viola piece, it would have to be this Mozart work,” Cook says. “[The second movement theme] has to be one of the most beautiful viola lines ever written.”

  • MOST OVERLOOKED—Elegy for Solo Viola, String Quartet, and Orchestra, Herbert Howells

    “It is very lyrical and full of soulful, plaintive melodies as well as heartbreaking emotion,” Cook says. “It is very well written for the viola and I feel that you can just let the instrument sing as the registers he writes help create the colors needed.

    “It is so well suited to viola and it is one of very few pieces that a violist can perform with a chamber orchestra.” Helen Callus has recorded the work (with the Walton Concerto).

    “It is absolutely beautiful.”


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    This article also appears in Strings, Issue #154




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