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5.0 out of 5 stars
A Stunner!, April 23 2007
It is to the credit of the Ames Piano Quartet, a group long-resident at Iowa State University (located in Ames, Iowa, whence the group's name), that they have recorded six -- count 'em, six -- piano quartets by British composers and not a loser among them. This 2CD set contains music by Mackenzie, Bridge, Howells, Stanford, Jacob and Walton. The informative program notes by Karl Gwiasda indicate that it all got started when a British musicologist, John Purser, during a residency at ISU brought their attention to the piano quartet of Alexander Campbell Mackenzie (1847-1935), a work never before recorded. This piece, let me say, is a major discovery. I would, in fact, place it in the exalted company of similar music by Schumann and Mendelssohn. In the usual four movements, it begins with a genial sonata-allegro followed by a downright infectious scherzo with a folk-music feel; one pictures Scots folk dancing on the lawn. A set of variations, again on a folk-like tune, follows; expert indeed, it is infused with both melodic and formal interest. The finale is another sonata-allegro with catchy dotted rhythms, all worked out with impeccable skill and grace. There is even an echo of Schumannesque fugato to be heard. The quartet was written in 1875, so it was probably a bit old-fashioned at the time, but at the distance now of more than 125 years that matters little. This is a piece that demands to be heard. One can only hope that it will be taken up by other groups.
The 11-minute Phantasy Quartet (1911) by Frank Bridge (1879-1941) was the third of the pieces Bridge wrote for W.W. Cobbett's annual competition for works in the 'Fantasy' form -- one movement, short duration, variations in tempo and meter. Bridge's work, heavily influenced by the new Impressionist ethos, is rhapsodic with full-throated lyrical melodies and both musing and exultant passages.
The Piano Quartet (1917, rev. 1936) of Herbert Howells (1892-1983) is in three movements. Howells, perhaps best known for his gorgeous sacred choral works, also left a large body of instrumental works, among them this quartet which has, unfortunately, never figured heavily in concert programs. Its first movement is a serene folk-tinged ballad. Its second movement, a gentle Lento molto tranquillo, is one of the highlights of this disc. The Ames Quartet play it with ineffable tenderness. I found myself going back to it again and again. The finale is a rumbustious allegro notable for its modal harmonies, evoking a rural Hardyan England.
Charles Villiers Stanford (1852-1924) was an Irish composer and pedagogue (teacher of, among many others, Holst, Vaughan Williams, Bridge, Howells and Jacob). His music is conservative and exceedingly beautifully crafted. He also was a richly talented melodist. The First Piano Quartet (1879) carries strong influences of Schumann and Brahms. It is notable for its high spirits. The sonata-allegro first movement has particularly appealing themes. Amazingly, he tops that with a second-movement Scherzo which bubbles and dances. The Adagio is a plaintive hymn with a gently spirited trio. The finale is a joyous rondo that sounds for all the world like it could have been written by Schumann.
The Piano Quartet (1969) by Gordon Jacob (1895-1984) is altogether more dramatic and angular than anything that precedes it in this set. Jacob, known primarily for his band music, as an arranger of others' music and as a writer on musical subjects, was a serious composer with an extensive portfolio of abstract works. Although conservative for his generation, nonetheless the music is strong meat with heavy dependence of secundal, quartal and modal harmonies. Its dramatic qualities are aptly underlined by the performance here.
The final work presented here, the Piano Quartet (1922, rev. 1976) of William Walton (1902-1983), was a student work Walton strengthened fifty years later. After a strongly modal first movement the Scherzo, placed second, has echoes of both Debussy and Stravinsky. The real gem of the work is the pastoral third movement, Andante tranquillo, which for all its Impressionist harmonies sounds as quintessentially English as anything written by, say, Vaughan Williams. The finale, Allegro molto, is again Stravinskyan, particularly in its virtuoso piano writing, and features islands of lovely reposeful string writing before reaching an exuberant ending.
I cannot praise highly enough the playing of The Ames Piano Quartet -- Mahlon Dartington, violin; Jonathan Sturm, viola; George Work, cello; William David, piano -- whose work here is of the highest order. I had admired their earlier set of the Fauré piano quartets but with this set I realize I need to seek out their other recordings; this is a world-class ensemble.
Strongly recommended.
Scott Morrison
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