BBC Music Magazine

Price • Sowerby

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Price: String Quartet No. 2 etc; Sowerby: String Quartet

Avalon String Quartet

Naxos 8559941 74:33 mins

Both these 20th-century composers spent much of their time in Chicago, but they lived very different American lives. Leo Sowerby, born in 1895, sustained a long career as an establishe­d composer and teacher, and won a Pulitzer Prize in 1946. The mixedrace Florence Price, born eight years earlier, worked diligently against much harder odds, but achieved no comparable distinctio­n. Today, however, Price is the one who gets bountifull­y performed and recorded, while Sowerby makes modest appearance­s here and there as a reminder of the past.

Yet it is Sowerby’s A minor

String Quartet that makes the biggest impression on this album. His language is muscular and direct, just like his English tempo markings: ‘languidly, darkly’,

‘very fast’. The latter describes the second movement, as relentless­ly and deliciousl­y syncopated as any of Tippett’s early works for strings. Sowerby can equally be expansivel­y lyrical. Passionate advocates, the Avalon players excel at any speed, though they can do little to repair the work’s one flaw: lopsided architectu­re, with a meatier finale definitely required.

Price’s music often manifests its own structural quirks, but her String Quartet No. 2 of 1935 is particular­ly cogent, with turbulent chromatic passages neatly balanced by soulful melodies always enhanced by the Avalon Quartet’s warm, rounded tones. Textures and melodies come equally meshed in 1951’s Five Folksongs in Counterpoi­nt, reaching their peak in a spirited and extended treatment of ‘Swing Low, Sweet Chariot’. All told, this is an excellent release. Geoff Brown PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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