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Thursday, 6 November 2025
in Atlanta, Georgia - USA
"Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less." ~Marie Curie

Tag Archives: Christopher Pulgram

l-r: Christopher Pulgram, Robert Anemone, Yang-Yoon, Kim, Thomas Carpenter, and Jesse McCandless perform Brahms' "Clarinet Quintet" at Garden Hills Recreation Center, February 11, 2024. (credit: Mark Gresham)

Peachtree String Quartet brings warmth and light to a damp, dreary day with music of Beethoven, Brahms, and Webern

Mark Gresham · February 13, 2024
Peachtree String Quartet: Christopher Pulgram, Yang-Yoon Kim, Thomas Carpenter, and Justin Bruns. (courtesy of PSQ)

Peachtree String Quartet delights in season finale with Mozart, Bridge, and Mendelssohn

Mark Gresham · May 6, 2023
Violinist Christopher Pulgram, pianist Charles Tichard-Hamelin, violist Yinzi Kong and cellist Thomas Carpenter perform the Piano Quartet No. 1 of Johannes Brahms. (credit: Mark Gresham)

Peachtree String Quartet breaks out of routine with pianist Charles Richard-Hamelin

Mark Gresham · February 8, 2022
The String Quartet No. 1 of Czech composer Leoš Janáček closed the first half of the program. It was inspired by Leo Tolstoy’s novella, The Kreutzer Sonata, which was itself inspired by Beethoven’s Violin Sonata No. 9, familiarly known as the “Kreutzer Sonata,” because Beethoven dedicated it to the French violinist and composer Rodolphe Kreutzer. However, Kreutzer never played Beethoven’s piece. It was originally dedicated to violinist George Bridgetower, who premiered it with Beethoven, but immediately after the concert, over a few drinks, Bridgetower insulted the moral behavior of a woman whom Beethoven adored. Enraged, Beethoven changed the dedication. Needless to say, as a title for Tolstoy’s story, The Bridgetower Sonata would not have had the same ring to it. So we can thank Beethoven for his passion of the moment. That theme actually brings us directly to Tolstoy’s story, which inspired artists other than Janáček, including visual artist René François Xavier Prinet, whose famous 1901 painting, Kreutzer Sonata, was also based on Tolstoy’s novella. It has also inspired multiple adaptations for theater, film, radio and television. Tolstoy’s novella itself, which was published in 1889, was certainly controversial for its era. It was swiftly censored in Russia, but became circulated in mimeographed form. An English translation eventually reached America and was banned. In 1890 the U.S. Post Office prohibited mailing of serialized versions printed in newspapers. Even president Theodore Roosevelt called Tolstoy a “sexual moral pervert.” The ban on the sale of the novella was eventually struck down by courts. In the midst of its deep first-person examination of jealousy and rage, Tolstoy argues for an ideal of sexual abstinence. Pozdnyshev, the narrating main character, relates the events of his deteriorating marriage leading up to killing his wife, a amateur pianist, when he believed he had caught her in an adulterous relationship with a male violinist — with whom she played Beethoven’s “Kreutzer Sonata,” naturally. Clearly, Tolstoy would have been uncomfortable with the Beatles’ song, “All You Need is Love.” Janáček’s music is mostly dark and brooding, punctuated by raging emotional outbursts, in its juxtapositions of melodic and rhythmic fragments. The first movement, with its opening rising motif, sets the melancholy tone of the whole. The second is a grim scherzo. The third quotes a slow theme from the opening movement of Beethoven’s Kreutzer Sonata, as if heard in the mind of the obsessively jealous Pozdyshev. In the fourth movement, we hear a reprise of materials from the first movement and a tearful theme in the first violin, bringing the drama to a direful conclusion.

Review: Peachtree String Quartet closes season with all-Czech program

Mark Gresham · March 6, 2019
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