New World Quartets -
Brodsky Quartet
Release Date: 6th Jan 2014
Catalogue No: CHAN10801
Label: Chandos
Length: 77 minutes
Antonín Dvořák (1841 – 1904)
[1]-[4] String Quartet in F major, Op. 96 ‘The American’ (1893)
Aaron Copland (1900 – 1990)
[5]-[6] Two Pieces for String Quartet (1923 – 28)
Samuel Barber (1910 – 1981)
[7]-[9] String Quartet, Op. 11 (1936, revised 1938)
George Gershwin (1898 – 1937)
[10] Lullaby for String Quartet (c. 1920)
Aaron Copland
[11] Hoe-Down (1942)
From the ballet Rodeo
Dave Brubeck (1920 – 2012)
[12] Regret (1999)
Brodsky Quartet
Daniel Rowland violin
Ian Belton violin
Paul Cassidy viola
Jacqueline Thomas cello
Notes
The Brodsky Quartet, continuing to pioneer unique repertoire on Chandos Records, presents a programme of works from the ‘New World’ that explores an American sound in the string quartet. The earliest piece on the disc is the American String Quartet, in F major by Antonín Dvorák, the only non-American composer in the release. His attempt to capture an American sound results in music of notable simplicity, directness, and good humour. In the String Quartet by Samuel Barber we hear an unashamedly romantic composer displaying a more European style. The central Adagio has become enormously popular in an arrangement for string orchestra. Far more distinctively American in idiom is the music of George Gershwin whose Lullaby was his first attempt at classical composition. Copland’s Two Pieces, a work written as a tribute to Gabriel Fauré, is featured along with an original arrangement by members of the Brodsky Quartet of his Hoe–Down. This famous work is enormously evocative of rural America and is heavily indebted to traditional tunes from Celtic settlers. Dave Brubeck is best known as a jazz pianist but he employs his classical training in Regret, which evokes the soundworld and emotional depth of the high baroque style while creating a unique link between the worlds of classical and jazz.