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William Alwyn: String Quartets Nos. 1-3; Novelette
 
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William Alwyn: String Quartets Nos. 1-3; Novelette

William Alwyn Audio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Composer: William Alwyn
  • Audio CD (November 18, 2008)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Naxos
  • ASIN: B001HBX8V4
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #200,298 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alwyn in a Personal Mode, February 2, 2009
This review is from: William Alwyn: String Quartets Nos. 1-3; Novelette (Audio CD)
William Alwyn (1905-1985) is generally known more for his sweeping movie scores or his romantic symphonies. And his piano music has a certain larger than life feel. The three string quartets, on the other hand, are intimate and personal. He wrote twelve or more quartets before he allowed one to be published as his First Quartet, which was premiered in 1954. It is in the usual four movements. The first movement, Moderato e grazioso, is influenced by the music of Dvorák and Smetana, as is, in fact, the rest of the quartet. It begins with a forceful idea that has the main melodic shape passed between first violin and cello. This is superseded by a sad and mysterious section that brings the movement to an abrupt end. The scherzo, Allegro molto, is a dancing, elusive movement that passes by quickly with a winsome smile. The Adagio is the emotional heart of the quartet. After a darkly grave opening it has a gorgeous middle section in which the muted lower strings accompany an ethereally lovely violin melody. This movement, like the first, ends abruptly and mysteriously. The Finale, Allegro vivace, molto ritmico, is characterized by a driving rhythmic frenzy supporting an anguished outpouring, what I hear as personal pain of some sort. After a brief island of serenity there is a fervent climactic coda.

The Second Quartet, written in 1975 after twenty years silence in the quartet genre, is subtitled 'Spring Waves', the latter taken from Turgenev's novel of that name in which occur the lines, the quartet's epigraph:

My careless years,
My precious days,
Like the waters of springtime,
Have melted away.

Obviously Alwyn, then seventy, was feeling his own careless and precious days slipping away. This quartet is more astringent and spare than the First. It has much more abrasive harmonies, with obsessive use of chords containing minor seconds. The first movement, Moderato, is full of 'high hopes and romantic illusions' but ends, sempre lento, in 'resignation and disillusionment'. The second, Allegro scherzando, is rhythmically more energetic and contains some reminiscence, in more clearly lyrical passages, of the loves and hopes of youth but 'seen through a glass darkly.' The pessimistic third and final movement, Adagio, limns, in the composer's words, 'the daunting prospect of old age', as reflected in a bleak fugue. It is interrupted briefly by a return of passion, but the fugue returns to conclude with a brief attempt at conquest of the inevitable. This is not an easy quartet to love, but it is a powerful statement in abstract terms of the composer's struggle with the emotional grip of old age.

The two-movement Third Quartet, from 1984, is Alwyn's last major work. It was begun after the composer had attended the recording of the first two quartets by the Quartet of London. The multi-section first movement, Allegro molto, passes from its forceful and dissonant opening to a more lyrical section led by the viola. These two ideas are developed together before the driving percussive opening returns. This pattern is repeated in varied form before a sudden, abrupt ending that catches one by surprise. The Adagio finale, lasting almost thirteen minutes, is primarily elegiac in tone. It opens with pianissimo time-standing-still section that gradually accelerates and crescendos into a waltz which has a lyrical first violin theme accompanied by pizzicato lower strings. The pattern is then reversed until the movement has returned to the quiet, serene mood of its opening measures.

The CD concludes with a two-and-a-half minute morceau, 'Novelette', from 1938. It was written at the request from the Oxford University Press for an 'easy' quartet movement, to be published along with similar works by other composers. It opens vigorously with what sounds like a fugato subject which is, however, never quite fugued. It has a baroquish feel nonetheless. There is a slower melodic middle section before a return to the opening melody in the first violin, this time with a musette accompaniment. After a brief return to the mood of the middle section there is, as many times earlier in this CD, an abrupt end.

The Maggini Quartet, led by the marvelous violinist Lorraine McAslan, has made a name for themselves championing the works of British composers, and on Naxos have recorded, to universal acclaim, the ten so-called 'Naxos Quartets' of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies. I have not heard any other recordings of the Alwyn quartets and thus cannot compare them with the Maggini effort, but I came away from this CD, after a number of hearings created increasing appreciation for the music, with very high regard for this group.

Scott Morrison
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars finely crafted quartets from William Alwyn, December 26, 2010
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jsa (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: William Alwyn: String Quartets Nos. 1-3; Novelette (Audio CD)
William Alwyn was a prolific composer and also a painter of some distinction, and those who are familiar with "Lyra Angelica" and "Autumn Legend" or have seen the landscapes that adorn the covers of the Chandos recordings of his work, would not be surprised that it was a quest for beauty, and not a search for truth or some other such abstraction, that guided his creative output. Alwyn's poem, "Daphne, or the Pursuit of Beauty," perhaps best sums up the outlook that informed his body of work:

Beauty is my reason for existence,
My day, my night, my all-in-all.
Faithless, I should cease to write.

This quest does not, by any account, mean that his music is insubstantial or always pleasing to the ear. Alwyn's quartets, which were written during the last thirty years of his life, bear witness to this. The first was completed in 1953, the second in 1975 when the composer was seventy, and the third in 1983, the last work he completed before his death. While all three quartets reflect to some extent the influence of Dvorak, Smetana and Janacek, which Alwyn acknowledged in an essay entitled "My Debt to Czech Music," it's in the first quartet that this is most noticeable. Alwyn's musical language is nevertheless very much his own and you never feel that anything he's written is derivative.

The first quartet is the most approachable, and in my view, the most appealing, although I very much liked the second quartet as well. Alwyn described this quartet as abstract, and while that may be so, I hear some impressionist influence that makes the whole thing, on balance, a satisfyingly modern work. The third quartet was written after Alwyn had suffered a stroke followed by pneumonia and meningitis, the combination of which almost took his life. The imminence of death is not apparent in the music, but Alwyn knew his time was short as indicated by the words which prefaced the score:

"All that is about me
a radiance - a sigh
Time now gathers my winding sheet
of syllable and song."

Even after multiple hearings, I can't say that I find this quartet as rewarding as the other two. It challenges the listener with its lack of thematic continuity, and this combined with numerous changes of tempo result in the whole thing having an unsettled air to it.

Overall, this disc is required listening for admirers of 20th century English music.



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