String
Quartet No. 1 (Robben Island)
The
World Première of String Quartet No. 1 (Robben
Island) took place on the 4th October 2000 at St
John's Smith Square, London. This first performance,
by the renowned Allegri String Quartet, was in the
presence of Her Excellency Cheryl Ann Carolus, High
Commissioner for the Republic of South Africa. Also
present was Professor Denis Goldberg who was originally
on trial with Nelson Mandela, and who spent many
years in prison in South Africa. The concert benefited
the Nelson Mandela Children's Fund. The Allegri
String Quartet subsequently toured the work beginning
with a performance at the Turner Sims Concert Hall
(Southampton) on Saturday 11th November 2000 followed
by three further performances in 2001 at Oxford,
Nottingham and Hull. This was preceded by their
discussion and performance of part of the quartet
on BBC Radio 3.
See the
Times review of the concert on the Reviews page.
The American
première of String Quartet No. 1 was
performed by the Amernet Quartet on February 15th
2004 at Cincinnati's Contemporary Arts Center as
part of Amernet's conTempo Series. This prize-winning
quartet, based in Cincinnati, has received international
acclaim and is the newly appointed Patricia A. Corbett
String Quartet in Residence at Northern Kentucky
University. Acclaimed by the New York Times as immensely
satisfying
their fine performances were most
notable for the quality of unjaded discovery that
came through so vividly.
The conTempo
Series is Amernet's newest offering to an audience
interested in having a positive and enlightening
experience with music written by composers of today.
Featuring a matched set of instruments made by renowned
violin maker Jules Azzi, from Azzi & Wolf. The
series presented an eclectic selection of works,
many of which were premières, by composers
from different parts of the world.
Programme
Notes:
Chorale
1 - Agitated and violent - Lilting, but with edge:
Restless, quasi-dance - With some panic: From afar
- Majestically: Joyous - Chorale 2
"From
the composers point of view it is somewhat
dangerous to be too prescriptive about a work. A
musical experience is a varied and developmental
process and strong leads about the makeup of a piece
imply just one level of understanding and perhaps
appreciation. But in this case, where I have tried
deliberately to link a contemporary event with the
arguably formal and revered medium of the string
quartet, I feel compelled to give the background
to the movements.
Robben
Island had for a number of years been a symbol of
great suffering and suppression of basic human rights.
But when I came to visit the island around Christmas
of 1999, having already begun this quartet, I realized
that it was also a place of beauty and mystery,
and of course immense inspiration. I appreciated
also that it is simply a piece of land, only temporarily
abused since its formation. So the piece needed
to reflect characteristics as well as events, and
therefore it emerges only gradually, almost like
the island appearing out of the mist. If it feels
uncertain and edgy, then all the better. The second
movement had a working title of the road from
Natal, where Nelson Mandela was arrested before
his final trial. It is violent, a siren wails in
places, although on occasion the chasing has odd
elements of farce. For the opening of the third
movement I had in mind the misery of being transported
to the island, tired, battered, and full of fear
and trepidation. A later section is marked Restless,
quasi-dance, and this relates to the earlier
history of the island. For some time it was a leper
colony and I wanted to convey a lifestyle and mental
energy that would be so strange and difficult to
comprehend by those on the outside. It draws to
a close with more reference to modern times, a confrontation
of imprisonment and a theoretical slamming of a
cell door gives it a dramatic finale. The fourth
movement had a working title of isolation
and I have used pizzicato chords to symbolize a
heartbeat that both stops and runs into panic. An
equally nervous pacing up and down can
be heard in the second violin, viola and cello.
This movement gives way to a re-emergence of the
opening chorale, but this time with a little off-beat,
reggae-like rhythm in the pizzicato first violin.
Here I had in mind the hub of real-life
that was so near to the islanders, and yet so far.
And then a fifth movement that had a working title
of spirit. Being marked Majestic:
Joyous it speaks for itself, and is a celebration
of one of the major successes of the twentieth century.
The work draws to a close with an ornamented version
of the original chorale, but this time it finishes
with a closer reference to the national anthem of
New South Africa.
In programme
notes I usually shy away from structural comment,
I think I have been worn down by the dominance that
analysis of what someone has done takes
over the act of creation. But I will
mention here the opening motif of the national anthem
of South Africa. I first hid this in a second subject
of a Sonatina for guitar some years ago. It was
no coincidence that I settled on this on the afternoon
that Mr. Mandela walked from Robben Island. I later
experimented with it in a student piece for orchestra,
and both of these gave me the preparation for this
larger scale work. The rising third of the opening
to the national anthem forms the basis of this quartet,
as does the three-note response. But in this piece
it is not the structure that is important, it is
the human element. Yes, this is a tribute to one
man, but to the spirit of many others as well."