SOUNDTRACK: THE EBENE QUARTET-“Felix Mendelssohn: String Quartet No. 6 in F Minor Allegro assai” (Field Recordings, January 25, 2013).
I don’t quite understand why this Field Recording [The Ebene Quartet Powers Through Mendelssohn] sounds so great–it is rich and full with resonant bass notes. Is it the recording or the quartet itself?
The title suggests it is the players.
The Paris-based Quatuor Ebene — the “Ebony Quartet” — has risen fast in the musical world with two separate artistic identities. In recent years, audiences have gotten to know the “other” Ebenes — the sophisticated cover band that plays everything from “Miserlou” (the Pulp Fiction theme) to jazz to “Someday My Prince Will Come” (yes, the one from Disney’s Snow White).
But when violinists Pierre Colombet and Gabriel Le Magadure, violist Mathieu Herzog and cellist Raphaël Merlin play classical music — whether Beethoven’s transcendent Op. 131 quartet or, as on their latest recording, works by brother-and-sister composers Felix and Fanny Mendelssohn — you realize the depth and beauty of vibrantly intense performances.
Felix Mendelssohn completed his String Quartet No. 6 in F Minor just two months before his own death, and very shortly after the death of his beloved sister Fanny. Even though this second movement, marked Allegro assai, is architecturally the “light” section in this piece, it’s full of dark colors, tense and moody and shaded with grey and black. The music provides rich counterpoint to the setting, the bright and spacious powerHouse Arena, a bookstore, gallery and performance space in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood.
We thought that the setting would appeal to the quartet’s double identities, given powerHouse’s signature mix of art titles and whimsical children’s selections, including a board book with a cute little piglet that clearly fascinated Raphaël to no end. And our idea worked: The shoot was bookended, so to speak, by the quartet browsing and buying. Maybe our idea worked a little too well? No matter — once the quartet got down to playing, the results were magical.
I have enjoyed Felix Mendelssohn’s music before, but this recording is outstanding.
[READ: October 20, 2017] “Strangler Bob”
I don’t enjoy prison stories.
This one is a little different, I suppose. It concerns a guy remembering his days in prison. He was eighteen and hadn’t been in too much trouble when his malicious mischief landed him a sentence of forty-one days.
His cellmate was an older guy, late forties, who was in the cell for doing “something juicy.” The narrator would eventually learn that his roommate is Strangler Bob, and that his own nickname is Dink.
He befriended a guy his own age named Donald Dundun, who liked to stroll the catwalks and climb the bars spreadeagling himself against the jambs .suspended in the air.
Then there’s another resident who the jailers referred to as Michael although he called himself Jocko He’d been in jail 18 times. Jocko organized poker games–the payoff and punishment was punches in the arm.
During one of the games Jocko screamed fifty-two pickup and flung the cards off the table. Then he rain into his cell.
There was a big red button that the inmates could push if they wanted the guards to come. But that button was closely guarded by the inmates.
Then a new inmate came, his name was B.D.–my name cannot be pronounced it can only be spelled,
Soon enough the narrator, Dundun and BD became the three musketeers. B.D says that his brother sold LSD, and he soaked a page in this magazine for them. So B.D. split it in thirds to share.
The rest of the story shows them all tripping.
Eventually Dundun realizes that Strangler Bob is the man who ate his wife. Bob tells what really happened. And he concludes by saying all three of them are going to end up committing murder.
The remainder of the story shows if that prediction played out.
I haven’t really loved Johnson’s stories in general, but this one had its moments.

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