BBC Music Magazine

Holst • Vaughan Williams

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Holst: Phantasy Quartet; Vaughan Williams: String Quartets Nos 1 & 2 Tippett Quartet

SOMM Recordings SOMMCD 0656

59:35 mins

This is an intermitte­ntly lovely, ultimately frustratin­g collection. That’s nothing to do with performanc­es or recording. The Tippett Quartet play this music with more than the requisite enthusiasm and insight, and the power and intimacy of their music-making is well caught by the recording team. I certainly haven’t heard either of the Vaughan Williams quartets played better than this. From the start of No. 2 the hope grew that here, at last, was an ensemble who could convince me that the finale isn’t a thumping let-down. The originalit­y, uneasy intensity and imaginativ­e verve of the first three movements leapt forward at every stage – fascinatin­g to consider that Vaughan Williams was composing this at the same time as the (largely) serene Fifth Symphony. But then comes that oddly low-key, church improvisat­ion-like ‘Epilogue’, and once again the whole piece falls sadly flat, despite the players’ best efforts.

That doesn’t happen in the much earlier First Quartet, but here, although some of the music is arrestingl­y beautiful, it doesn’t have anything like the tight focus of the Second’s first three movements. The lasting, seriously disappoint­ing conclusion is that Vaughan Williams could have written one of the great British string quartets, that he came very close, but that he seems to have lost focus at the final hurdle.

The Holst is entertaini­ng and occasional­ly touching, but it’s a long way from, on the one hand the St Paul’s Suite, and on the other the deliciousl­y ingenious late Terzetto. Stephen Johnson

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

 ?? ?? Imaginativ­e programme: the Talich Quartet is anything but routine
Imaginativ­e programme: the Talich Quartet is anything but routine
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