Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) String Quartets Vol. 2 What's in a name? Is it just piquant coincidence that one of Britain's greatest composers was called -...
Benjamin Britten
(1913-1976)
String Quartets Vol. 2
What's in a name? Is it just piquant coincidence that one of Britain's
greatest composers was called - Britten? Benjamin Britten's beloved mother
certainly saw significance in her married surname: extolling the 'three Bs' -
Bach, Beethoven and Brahms - she was 'determined' the fourth would be Britten.
Benjamin was her fourth child, born, auspiciously, on November 22nd: St
Cecilia's Day, feast day of the patron saint of music.
The future composer's childhood home faced the North Sea in Lowestoft,
the most easterly town in Britain. Britten loved his native Suffolk, feeling
'firmly rooted in this glorious county'; he could have added the words of
fisherman Peter Grimes in his most famous opera '...by familiar fields, marsh
and sand, ordinary streets, prevailing wind'. What drew Britten and his lover
and muse, the tenor Peter Pears, back from their new life in America in the
early 1940s? Britten's rediscovery of the Suffolk poet George Crabbe, whose The
Borough inspired Peter Grimes. Where did Britten and Pears
settle? That very 'Borough', Aldeburgh, another Suffolk coastal town which,
thanks to Britten, has been home since 1948 to one of Britain's finest music
festivals. He found 'working becomes more and more difficult away from that
home'.
A quintessentially English, provincial composer, then? Far from it.
After Britten's death The Times acclaimed him 'the first British
composer to capture and hold the attention of musicians and their audiences the
world over'. Britten's technical brilliance and openness to continental trends
distinguished him from the start. In the 1920s the precocious 13-year-old -
pianist, viola-player and already prolific composer (shades of Mozart) - was
fortunate to find a composition teacher in Frank Bridge, virtually the only
British composer with a sympathy for the central European avant-garde of
Schoenberg, Berg and Bartok, or neo-classical Stravinsky. To those models
Britten added Mahler and Shostakovich. No wonder the conservative Royal College
of Music, which he attended from 1930, suffered culture shock, especially when
Britten proposed to use a travel grant to study with Berg. (He didn't.)
The mainstay of Britten's international appeal is the stream of operatic
masterpieces initiated by Peter Grimes in 1945; but they, and his other
Pears-inspired vocal music, mask further important creative strands: pieces for
young people and instrumental music. True, for a decade in mid-career Britten
wrote practically nothing substantial without voices; but before Grimes his
chamber and orchestral compositions outnumbered vocal works two to one (the
string quartet playing a central role); and after 1960 musical friendships -
above all with the cellist Rostropovich - revitalised that interest.
Indeed, the string quartets on this CD span fifty years. The Third
Quartet (1975) was Britten's last major work, premièred after his death,
while the Simple Symphony includes tunes he wrote in 1923 - aged nine!
As he turned twenty, Britten filched themes from his earliest pieces to develop
into this buoyant 'Symphony' for string quartet or string orchestra. Its
orchestral version (recorded on Naxos 8.550979) is more often heard, but a
quartet adds brio in Boisterous Bourree, sheer fun in Playful
Pizzicato and Frolicsome Finale, and surprising depth of feeling in Sentimental
Saraband - suggesting a less-acknowledged influence: Elgar.
If the Symphony's simplicity lies in its youthful musical
language, by his last year at school Britten was following Bridge in daring new
directions. The Quartettino of 1930 is an astonishing achievement for a
sixteen-year-old. The restless, chromatic lines of its three movements, all
evolving from a five-note rising-falling shape which prefaces the score, are as
radical as anything in British music at the time - Britten at ease among his
central European examples.
(1933 - though unpublished, like the Quartettino,
until the 1980s) brings another stylistic leap, but sounds eerily familiar:
accompanying the voice in the wild penultimate Parade of Britten's 1939
song-cycle Les Illuminations (recorded on Naxos 8.553834) is an expanded
version of Alla Marcia. This sinister Mahlerian march was originally
intended for a quartet which became the three Divertimenti, recorded by
the Maggini Quartet on their companion CD, Naxos 8.553883.
The very mastery of his Second Quartet (1945, following Peter
Grimes, and also on that companion CD) may have contributed to Britten's
subsequent thirty-year silence in the medium. Increasingly gnawed as he was by
self-doubt, the string quartet - by reputation the pinnacle of abstract music -
must have seemed daunting. Ironically, the sheer physical difficulty of
composing, after a heart operation in 1973 caused partial paralysis of his
right hand, apparently influenced Britten's final return to the quartet: only
four parts to write! But the Third Quartet's spare textures - reflected
in its titles, Duets (exploring all six possible pairings of the four
instruments) and Solo (spotlighting the first violin) - are
characteristic, indeed a summation, of Britten's late style. The arch-like
five-movement form recalls Bartok, Shostakovich, even Beethoven; Britten
invokes his friend Shostakovich, who had just died, in Ostinato (built
on four notes spanning almost three octaves), Solo and especially the
weird Burlesque - a title from two other valedictory works, Mahler's Ninth
Symphony and Bartok's Sixth Quartet, as well as Britten's own
forty-year-old Divertimenti. La serenissima (Venice) was written there; Recitative
quotes Britten's last opera Death in Venice, while his last Passacaglia
(a favourite form, unfolding over a repeated bass) ends, he said, 'with a
question' - consonance undermined and outlived by an enigmatic cello note:
suggesting, to Britten's chosen biographer Donald Mitchell, 'I'm not dead yet!'
David Gallagher