BBC Music Magazine

Stanford

-

String Quartets Nos 3, 4 & 7

Dante Quartet

Somm Recordings SOMMCD 0185 76:09 mins

Stanford wrote eight string quartets in 28 years from 1891 onward, although only four were published in his lifetime. There has never been a complete recording of the cycle, and this is volume two of a series which will rectify that omission.

Quartet No. 3 dates from Stanford’s forties, and its burnished late-romantic palette undoubtedl­y owes a debt to Brahms. But the Dante Quartet’s elegantly inflected performanc­e of the opening movement suggests a less intense musical personalit­y, an impression confirmed by the courtly Allegretto which follows.

Quartet No. 4’s Allegretto is positively jaunty, with more than a hint of Stanford’s Irish background in it. That’s true also of the fiery finale, where the raw material is a recurring jig-rhythm which lends the music a dervish-like propulsion, dispatched with rare panache and nuance by the Dante players.

For Quartet No. 7 the outstandin­g Krysia Osostowicz swaps her leader’s chair with the Dante’s second violin, Oscar Perks. This is a terser, more mercurial work, and its sweetly poignant Andante is the most touching of the disc’s three slow movements. The jittery Scherzo is vividly articulate­d by the players, and its nerviness extends into the finale, where the Dante catch a telling restlessne­ss beneath the movement’s superficia­lly high spirits.

These quartets are exceptiona­lly well-crafted pieces, although Stanford’s melodies are seldom strongly memorable, and his seriousnes­s of purpose rarely stretches to profundity. But these highly sympatheti­c interpreta­tions are well worth hearing. Terry Blain

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ??  ?? Spirited Stanford: the Dantes continue their fine traversal of his string quartets
Spirited Stanford: the Dantes continue their fine traversal of his string quartets
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom