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Delmé Quartet: Robert Simpson – String Quartets 7 & 8 (FLAC)

Delmé Quartet: Robert Simpson - String Quartets 7 & 8 (FLAC)
Delmé Quartet: Robert Simpson – String Quartets 7 & 8 (FLAC)

Composer: Robert Simpson
Performer: Delmé Quartet
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Hyperion
Catalogue: CDA66117
Release: 1989
Size: 206 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

String Quartet No. 7
01. I. Tranquillo –
02. II. Vivace –
03. III. Tempo primo

String Quartet No. 8
04. I. Grave, molto intensivo
05. II. Molto vivace ‘Eretmapodites gilletti’
06. III. Allegretto grazioso
07. IV. Risoluto e concentrato

Quiet music with a sense of purpose and forward- looking destiny; slow music which bears the promise of a controlled release of energy, these are rare and treasurable qualities in music of our time, and they make their presence felt at the beginnings of Simpson’s Seventh and Eighth Quartets. How he progresses through subdued scherzo to vehement climax is something to reflect on at length, and with further acquaintance comes the Beethovenian thrill of hearing the music think. But at first these things just steal up on you and take the breath away.

The Seventh Quartet is dedicated to Susi Jeans, widow of astronomer and mathematidan Sir James Jeans, the Eighth is dedicated to entomologist David Gillett and his wife. Both works draw on the kind of motion suggested by those areas of sdentific enquiry. On the other hand the Ninth calls up what would seem to be the bitterest enemy of forward movement – the palindrome; 32 variations and a fugue, in fact, on the minuet from Haydn’s Symphony No 47 and all of them, like the original theme, palindromic. If Simpson’s powers of invention falter at any stage in this hour-long tour de force you would be hard pushed to discover where. But then this music so completely absorbing that the necessary critical detachment is difficult to achieve. The only reservation that did register was over recording quality, which for the Ninth Quartet is disappointingly boxy – sensuous appeal isn’t what this music is about, but a more ingratiating acoustic wouldn’t do it any harm – and to hear the Seventh without the distraction, however faint, of traffic noise would be preferable.

The Delme Quartet’s performances are outstandingly dedicated. The Ninth Quartet was composed for their 20th anniversary and they prove themselves entirely worthy of the honour.

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