Aylesbury Lunchtime Music presents

Resol String Quartet

16 November 2023

Starts: 12:45pm, Doors: 12:15pm

Duration: 1 hour (approx.)

£7 adults on the door (<18s & carers free)

Resol String Quartet

Programme

  • String Quartet No 8, Op. 59 No. 2 (Beethoven)

    i Allegro ii Molto adagio (Si tratta questo pezzo con molto di sentimento) iii Allegretto iv Finale. Presto

    The String Quartet No. 8 in E minor, Op. 59, No. 2, was published in 1808. This work is the second of three of his “Rasumovsky” cycle of string quartets, and is a product of his “middle” period.

    According to Carl Czerny, the second movement of the quartet occurred to Beethoven as he contemplated the starry sky and thought of the music of the spheres (Thayer, Life of Beethoven); it has a hymnlike quality reminiscent of a much later devotion, the “Heiliger Dankgesang” hymn to the Divine in the Quartet Op. 132.

  • String Quartet in A minor, Op. 13 (Mendelssohn)

    i Adagio ii Allegro vivace iii Adagio non lento iv Intermezzo v Presto

    The String Quartet No. 2 in A minor, Op. 13, was composed by Felix Mendelssohn in 1827. Written when he was 18 years old, it was, despite its official number, Mendelssohn’s first mature string quartet. One of Mendelssohn’s most passionate works, the A minor Quartet is one of the earliest and most significant examples of cyclic form in music.

  • The Crossing Point: String Quartet no.4 (Broughton)

    In 2021 the Resol Quartet asked me to consider writing a piece for one of their winter tours. The suggestion was that I might use seasonal themes related to Christmas. At first I was unsure about this idea, as I didn’t want to create a ‘Christmas Medley’. However, it struck me that the idea might work if I were to use just two different carol melodies, and vary each of them in turn to produce a set of ‘double variations’ (a form that seems to have been invented by Haydn). The next step was to find a Scottish carol and an English carol that might lend themselves to this approach.

    Finding the Scottish carol wasn’t easy: it seems there are far fewer carols in the Scottish tradition than in the English. However, I quickly found a strikingly beautiful melody known as Talàdh Chrìosda – the Christ Child’s Lullaby – and I have paired this with the English melody ‘A Virgin Most Pure’. Although the two melodies are quite different in character, they can also be combined, and this does happen at the end of the piece. However, each melody has to be adapted slightly to make this work: you could say that each has to be willing to take on some of the characteristics of the other. Perhaps this is the ideal ‘crossing point’: a border between traditions and, by extension, nations, which is characterised by mutual respect, and a willingness to collaborate.

    Of course, borders can also be terrible places, and the beginning of my quartet is an evocation of the plight of refugees walking for hours, days, weeks, to escape persecution, hunger and war. This melancholy opening idea is only slightly related to the two carol melodies. It returns twice before the music reaches a more tranquil crossing point where the two melodies can finally be combined.

Performers

  • Resol String Quartet

    String ensemble

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Key information for concert goers

When

Every Thursday at 12:45pm (except August & over Christmas). Performances last around 60 minutes. Please enter quietly as there is a noon service in the Lady Chapel.

How much?

Entry is £7 per adult (card or cash), under 18s and carers are free. The price includes a programme. Donations are welcomed to subsidise the larger ensembles.

Where?

Performances are at St Mary’s Church in the heart of Aylesbury Old Town. See directions for further details.

Do I need to book?

No, just turn up. Doors open at 12:15 pm. Make sure you arrive in good time to get a seat.

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