The program at Old First Church on Sunday afternoon was titled "Alla Zingarese," but the program of the Laurel Ensemble actually covered the two principal aspects underlying traditional Hungarian music: the native folk music and the better-known Romany traditions. ("Romany" is current preferred PC-speak for "Gypsy.") It added up to a hint that we might start thinking of expanding the term Three B's — Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms — to include Bartók as the new fourth "B".
A flute–piano transcription of Bartók's music opened the proceedings, followed by an authentic piece. First came something titled Suite Paysanne Hongroise (Hungarian peasant suite), put together and arranged by someone named Paul Arma. Then we heard the composer's authentic Contrasts (1938) for clarinet trio.
Following intermission there was Brahms' big, masterful Piano Quartet No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 25 (1858-61), with its Romany-style finale, the "Rondo alla Zingarese." These were performed in the various combinations by a sextet that included flutist Sarah Holzman, clarinetist Ann Lavin, violinist Christina Mok, violist Jenny Douglass, cellist Krisanthy Desby, and pianist Lori Lack.
Thing is, in his music Bartók was absorbed with Hungarian peasant-music traditions, not Romany music. Arma's Suite is set as three movements individually titled: Chants populaires 1-4; a Scherzo; and Vielles dances 1-9. Those are all apparently drawn from this and that among Bartók's literal notations of peasant folk song or his smaller piano settings. (These titles are not listed in Bartók's official catalog of works, and certainly not in French.) But no matter. They amount to a charming bouquet of tiny pieces, a sort of folksy nosegay. While technically fine, Laurel's performance stuck me as a tad too literal.
By contrast, Contrasts was an authentic piece commissioned of Bartók, written particularly for the great jazz clarinetist Benny Goodman, and first heard in 1940 as played by Goodman and violinist Joseph Szigeti, with Bartók himself as pianist. Shortly after the New York premiere the three recorded the slight, zany Contrasts for Columbia. As far as I know, this was the composer's sole commercial recording while in the United States.
The piece is laid out in pretty much the traditional three-movement manner of a formal trio. Each of the three movements carries its own title: "Recruiting Dance" is in a freelance sonata form (no recapitulation), "Relaxation" comes across in Bartók's slightly eerie night-music fashion, and a riotous "Fast Dance" finale is highlighted with sonic burlesques and a bravura clarinet solo. Violinist Mok was especially impressive in the part written for Szigeti, and the audience obviously loved it.