Panufnik String Quartets
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Andrzej Panufnik
Label: Classics
Magazine Review Date: 12/1993
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 72
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CDCF218
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
String Quartet No. 1, `Prelude-Transformations-Pos |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Chilingirian Qt |
String Quartet No. 2, `Messages' |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Chilingirian Qt |
String Quartet No. 3, `Wycinanki' |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Chilingirian Qt |
Song to the Virgin Mary |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Chilingirian Qt Roger Chase, Viola Stephen Orton, Cello |
String Sextet, `Trains of Thought' |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Chilingirian Qt Roger Chase, Viola Stephen Orton, Cello |
Author:
Although Andrzej Panufnik's three string quartets are relatively late works, the second of them—subtitled Messages—is actually a delayed musical reaction to a childhood experience. Even at the age of seven, Panufnik was fascinated by the musical potential of non-musical sounds; he would press his ear against a telegraph pole and listen ''to sounds produced by the poles vibrating in the wind'' (Panufnik's own description)—a radical metaphor, surely, for the principles underlying the construction of stringed instruments. No wonder he allotted his ''fantasy-poem'' to a quartet, the ideal medium for expressing high-reaching sonorities and relentless tonal squabbling. While the Second Quartet (1980) recalls the outdoor nocturnals of Bartok and Szymanowski, the First—a product of 1976—opens with urgent, strongly differentiated chatter. But at 3'12'' (track 1), Panufnik switches to luminous, long-breathed lines; subdued, shifting and rising (6'30'') to an ethereal height. Like the symphonies, the quartets develop from tiny thematic germs; yet listeners habitually fazed by structural technicalities will find atmosphere to spare, even in the high-energy Postlude (a sort of Martinu sans melody).
The Third Quartet was commissioned by the 1991 London International String Quartet Competition and was designed as the test piece. Busy in the extreme, it is cast as five separate 'miniature studies' (and is tracked as such on the CD, although neither booklet nor jewel case admits the fact); it also serves as a concentrated resume of Panufnik's quartet style. Which leaves the two works for string sextet. The Song to the Virgin Mary was transcribed from an a cappella choral piece of the same name and conjures up something of Dvorak's steadfast, simple piety. The Song opens with a chant in harmonics then (to quote Bernard Jacobson, the author of Conifer's excellent booklet-notes), ''weaves through all six voices and passes through all 23 keys'', always respectful of its ancient models. ''Trains of Thought'' was inspired by the hypnotic rhythm of wheels on track and the thoughts suggested by them; it is based on a three-note cell, ''constantly rotated and frequently transposed and reflected''. But the effect is more like a dream one might have of the train floating off the tracks and careering up into the firmament: the rhythm remains gently insistent, the harmonic language subtle and suggestive. A strong idea, it's also the one work on the disc that I thought might have benefited from a little pruning: eight or nine minutes would surely have been more effective than nearly 14.
The Chilingirian Quartet perform well, the sound production is excellent and the notes are both appetizing and informative. A most engaging release and a positive signal, one hopes, that further innovative chamber programmes will be forthcoming from the same source.'
The Third Quartet was commissioned by the 1991 London International String Quartet Competition and was designed as the test piece. Busy in the extreme, it is cast as five separate 'miniature studies' (and is tracked as such on the CD, although neither booklet nor jewel case admits the fact); it also serves as a concentrated resume of Panufnik's quartet style. Which leaves the two works for string sextet. The Song to the Virgin Mary was transcribed from an a cappella choral piece of the same name and conjures up something of Dvorak's steadfast, simple piety. The Song opens with a chant in harmonics then (to quote Bernard Jacobson, the author of Conifer's excellent booklet-notes), ''weaves through all six voices and passes through all 23 keys'', always respectful of its ancient models. ''Trains of Thought'' was inspired by the hypnotic rhythm of wheels on track and the thoughts suggested by them; it is based on a three-note cell, ''constantly rotated and frequently transposed and reflected''. But the effect is more like a dream one might have of the train floating off the tracks and careering up into the firmament: the rhythm remains gently insistent, the harmonic language subtle and suggestive. A strong idea, it's also the one work on the disc that I thought might have benefited from a little pruning: eight or nine minutes would surely have been more effective than nearly 14.
The Chilingirian Quartet perform well, the sound production is excellent and the notes are both appetizing and informative. A most engaging release and a positive signal, one hopes, that further innovative chamber programmes will be forthcoming from the same source.'
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