Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta John Myerscough. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta John Myerscough. Mostrar todas las entradas
jueves, 8 de octubre de 2020
sábado, 8 de septiembre de 2018
Doric String Quartet MENDELSSOHN String Quartets Vol. One
Alongside its ongoing and much lauded Haydn and Schubert series, both
on-stage and on-record, the Doric String Quartet with this Mendelssohn
album is adding a new milestone in its repertoire.
Mendelssohn wrote and published these three quartets at very
different stages in his life and they therefore outline the complete
trajectory of his creative output.
The early Op. 12, also called No. 1, was composed in London and
includes many musical allusions to Beethoven, dead only a few years
before its composition. These subtly contrast with Mendelssohn’s
genially flowing energy.
While Op. 44 No. 3, which incorporates many deft variations,
developments, and combinations, follows an extended honeymoon tour and
Mendelssohn’s twenty-ninth birthday, Op. 80 emerged from a bout of
helpless depression after the sudden death of Mendelssohn’s older sister
and confidante, Fanny. Mendelssohn described this quartet as a Requiem,
and the nervous agitation often found in his music here bursts forth
with full force. Resignation, agitation, and nostalgia shape the work,
the almost shocking finality of which may be said to prefigure
Mendelssohn’s own death only six months later.
sábado, 5 de mayo de 2018
Doric String Quartet / Royal Scottish National Orchestra / Peter Oundjian JOHN ADAMS Naive and Sentimental Music - Absolute Jest
As part of his final year as Music Director and following a
two-season celebration of the Orchestra’s 125th anniversary, Peter
Oundjian and the RSNO here present their second recording of music by
John Adams, with the exceptional participation of the Doric String
Quartet.
Written for a large orchestra including six percussionists, keyboard sampler, and amplified steel-string guitar, Naive and Sentimental Music
is a sweepingly symphonic masterpiece, full of contrasts and clashes.
It reflects the dichotomy between ‘naive’ and ‘sentimental’ poetry as
analysed by Friedrich Schiller in his 1795 essay Über naive und sentimentalische Dichtung,
as well as the ‘bipolar’ musical life of Esa-Pekka Salonen, the
dedicatee of this piece, who conducted the first performance with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic in 1999.
Absolute Jest is a large-scale scherzo for amplified string
quartet and orchestra, heavily inspired by the music of Beethoven, which
Adams has always deeply admired. The quartet of soloists, a late
addition to the score, emphasises the echoes of Beethoven’s music
(mainly his string quartets) and facilitates a ‘hyperspace rate’ of
virtuosity, which the Doric String Quartet here perfectly demonstrates.
viernes, 21 de julio de 2017
Jennifer Pike / Tom Poster / Doric String Quartet CHAUSSON Concert for Violin, Piano and String Quartet - String Quartet
Chausson’s premature death in 1899 in a cycling accident left his
String Quartet unfinished. Two movements were complete, with a third
needing the helping hand of Vincent d’Indy. It was clearly intended as a
four-movement work and is conceived on a grand scale. The Doric make
the best possible case for the piece, even where it’s less than
polished. This is very much a product of its time, sitting on the cusp
of the 19th and 20th centuries, with all the unease that that suggests;
it has its hints of Wagner but also echoes of Debussy. The third
movement is the weakest, without a particularly pronounced character,
which is ironically not helped by d’Indy’s very definite ending, which
rounds it off as if it were a true finale rather than the penultimate
movement.
The Concert is another matter, however. Chausson’s musical
inventiveness amply fills its statuesque dimensions and it never
outstays its welcome. There are plenty of opportunities for Jennifer
Pike to display her sinuous, tender tone, while Tom Poster reminds us
yet again why he’s so highly regarded as a chamber musician: sample from
around 4'10" in the finale, where he makes light and highly nuanced
work of the filigree that forms a shadowy backdrop to the strings. In
some performances it can feel as if the quartet is too small a force to convey the grandeur of Chausson’s vision, but not here, with the Doric
revelling in the luxuriant textures. Though I retain a soft spot for the
note of disquiet that Graffin brings to the Grave in his
recording with the Chilingirian, their reading as a whole doesn’t have
the same cumulative impact as the Doric et al. And there’s no contest in
the finale, which in the new version has a thrilling one-in-a-bar
propulsion. A real front-runner for the Concert, and the most convincing of advocates for the more problematic String Quartet. (Harriet Smith / Gramophone)
viernes, 20 de enero de 2017
Doric String Quartet SCHUBERT String Quartet in G major - String Quartet in C minor
Alongside its highly praised Haydn series, the
Doric String Quartet continues its Schubert journey with this second
volume of quartets, which precipitates us into the fraught world of late
Schubert. Both composers will be central in the Quartet’s recitals next
year, to take place in the highest-profile international venues, from
New York’s Carnegie Hall to Berlin’s Konzerthaus, Amsterdam’s
Concertgebouw, and London’s Wigmore Hall.
Franz Schubert returned to composing string quartets in the 1820s, after four years of focusing on songs which were beginning to gain him wider recognition.
His late chamber compositions reveal probably his most characteristic music, full of deep intimacy and profound ambivalence. The ‘Quartettsatz’ (Quartet Movement) presents a turbulent, norm-breaking first movement. Only a fragment survives of a serene Andante in A flat, and nothing for any scherzo or finale. If the 'Rosamunde' and 'Death and the Maiden' (CHAN10737) are the most frequently heard of the quartets of Schubert, his last completed one – in G major – certainly remains his most uncompromising in its vastness, and perhaps his most prophetic of the musical future. (Presto Classical)
Franz Schubert returned to composing string quartets in the 1820s, after four years of focusing on songs which were beginning to gain him wider recognition.
His late chamber compositions reveal probably his most characteristic music, full of deep intimacy and profound ambivalence. The ‘Quartettsatz’ (Quartet Movement) presents a turbulent, norm-breaking first movement. Only a fragment survives of a serene Andante in A flat, and nothing for any scherzo or finale. If the 'Rosamunde' and 'Death and the Maiden' (CHAN10737) are the most frequently heard of the quartets of Schubert, his last completed one – in G major – certainly remains his most uncompromising in its vastness, and perhaps his most prophetic of the musical future. (Presto Classical)
jueves, 24 de noviembre de 2016
Doric String Quartet / Allison Bell BRETT DEAN Epitaphs - String Quartet No. 1 - String Quartet No. 2
It is impossible to talk about the chamber music of the Australian composer Brett Dean
without mentioning that he was principal viola of the Berlin
Philharmonic. Inevitably he understands string textures from the inside,
with compelling results. The excellent Doric Quartet rise to the challenges of these elegiac works. Eclipse
(String Quartet No 1), particularly timely, conjures the despair of the
boat people rescued from the Indian Ocean by the Norwegian freighter
Tampa in 2001,
then denied admission to Australia. The three movements flicker between
light and dark, turbulence and calm. Five Epitaphs offer moving
portraits of five dead friends, including the conductor Richard Hickox. The Quartet No 2, ”And once I played Ophelia” (2013), has a part, too, for soprano (Allison Bell) which began as the seeds of an unwritten Hamlet opera. Tense, tender and original, it’s a tough but rewarding listen. (The Guardian)
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