BRIDGE: Phantasy / String Quartets Nos. 2 and 4
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Frank Bridge (1879-1941) String Quartet No. 2 Phantasy Quartet String Quartet No. 4 Frank Bridge studied violin and composition at the Royal College of...
Frank Bridge (1879-1941)
String Quartet No. 2 Phantasy Quartet String Quartet No. 4
Frank Bridge studied violin and composition at the
Royal College of Music where he was a pupil of
Stanford from 1899 to 1903. Apart from composition,
his career embraced performance (he was the violist in
several quartets, most notably the English String
Quartet), conducting (he frequently deputised for Sir
Henry Wood), and teaching (Britten being his bestknown
pupil). Perhaps no other British composer of the
first half of the century reveals such a stylistic journey
in his music. His early works, such as the First String
Quartet (1906), the Phantasy Piano Trio (1907) and the
orchestral suite The Sea (1910-11), follow in the late-
Romantic tradition bearing a kinship with Faure;
subsequently, in the orchestral tone poem Summer
(1914-5), for instance, Bridge comes close to the orbit
of Delius. After the First World War, however, his
music became intense and chromatic as in the
Scriabinesque Piano Sonata (1921-4). The radical
language of the sonata was pursued in his chamber
works of the 1920s, so that in the Third String Quartet
(1926) Bridge rubs shoulders with the early works of
the Second Viennese School. Also to this decade belong
two orchestral masterpieces, Enter Spring (1927) and
Oration (1930). Finding little favour with public or
critics his late work, for example the Fourth String
Quartet (1934-8), languished, and despite Britten's
advocacy it was not until the 1970s that Bridge's
remarkable legacy received the attention it deserved.
At the outset of his career Bridge established his
name through a series of chamber works in which he
demonstrated impeccable craftsmanship and a wholly
idiomatic understanding of string instruments, with the
viola, his own main instrument, frequently having
prominence. A further influence on the form of these
works was the prizes instituted by Walter Wilson
Cobbett, an amateur musician whose interests were
chamber music and the period of the Elizabethan and
Jacobean composers. In particular Cobbett was
interested in the instrumental 'fantasy' or 'phantasy'
form of that time in which several unrelated but varied
sections formed the basis for an extended work. In 1905
he established a prize for chamber compositions in one
movement and Bridge submitted several works for
Cobbett's competitions, winning first prize in 1907 and
1915. What was significant though was that Bridge
adapted aspects of the phantasy form within subsequent
compositions, so that thematic unity within a work of
one or several movements became a hallmark of his
compositions.
The Second String Quartet was composed in 1914-
15 in response to Cobbett's fourth competition for the
best string quartet in either sonata form, suite or
phantasy form. Entries were finally divided into those
who wrote sonatas and those who wrote phantasies,
with Bridge's quartet winning the former. The London
String Quartet gave the première in 1915 and the quartet
may be heard as a transitional work between Bridge's
early and later styles; there is a clear advance in its
harmonic language with an increased use of
chromaticism and motivic elements within the textures
to bind the work together. It is undoubtedly Bridge's
first chamber masterwork.
Without any preamble the first violin launches into
the main theme of the opening movement which dips
and rises in a lyrical contour and features triplets. Bursts
of rhythmic energy follow, but these give way to a
nostalgic expansive second principal theme given
initially to the viola to reveal its expressive range over
oscillating triplets. A slow coda of pensive beauty based
on both main themes concludes the movement.
The degree to which phantasy form affected Bridge's
structural thinking is apparent in the scherzo where an
extended slow middle section is incorporated rather
than a conventional trio. Thematic integration is also
evident with triplets once again dominating the
landscape of the breezy, airy scherzo and spawning new
ideas which in turn become the main melody of the
Andante con moto. This theme is also related to material
from Bridge's tone poem Summer which he interrupted
composing in order to write the quartet. The finale is an
arch structure, opening with a slow section in which the
first movement's second theme is transformed.
Similarly the main themes of the Allegro vivace can
both be related to previous ideas. The pattering figure
like dappled light also bears similarity to the opening of
Summer and overall the music becomes more optimistic
until in a master-stoke Bridge weaves in both themes
from the first movement.
The Phantasy for piano quartet was Bridge's third
work cast in phantasy form, and was one of eleven
works for differing chamber forces commissioned by
Cobbett. Composed during 1909-10, it was dedicated to
Cobbett and given its première by the Henkel Piano
Quartet in 1911. In terms of Bridge's career it comes
towards the end the early period when he was not
venturing out of a late nineteenth-century harmonic
language. It is also one of the finest works that arose out
of Cobbett's initiative, partly because its symmetrical
arch structure brings a strong cohensive logic to its
sequence of introduction and slow movement; scherzo,
trio, scherzo; slow movement and coda.
The quartet opens with a passionate introductory
gesture for the whole ensemble before the piano plays a
lyrical, undulating theme shot through with sadness
which forms the main idea of the opening section. It is
taken up by the cello and leads to a warmer second
theme that is constantly aspiring upwards and
culminates in a quasi Brahmsian harmonic sequence. A
puckish scherzo follows. It scampers impishly along to
reach with the trio the middle of the overall arch form of
the quartet. Here the introductory ideas of the quartet
return. The journey back begins with a recapitulation of
the scherzo, then the introduction itself now truncated
and for cello alone. Second time around the slow music
is developed and rises to an ardent climax as the ideas
are reviewed, before a tranquil coda brings the work to
an end in the calm of the major key.
The Fourth String Quartet was dedicated to
Bridge's American friend and patroness, Elizabeth
Sprague Coolidge. It was composed in 1937 with the
première taking place in 1938, performed by the
Gordon String Quartet, at Mrs Coolidge's Berkshire
Festival of Chamber Music in Massachusetts. The work
follows the developments Bridge had made in his Third
Quartet in its use of chromatic dissonance; however, as
the Bridge scholar Anthony Payne has observed, its
formal structure has a more classical approach with a
clear-cut sonata-form first movement, followed by a
minuet and a rondo finale.
The opening movement embraces several swiftly
changing moods and directions, contrasting energy and
tenderness. After a brief call to attention by the viola,
the athletic principal theme is introduced on the first
violin. Instructions to the players that pepper the score
such as 'agitato', 'frenetico' and 'impetuoso' give the
clue to the character of the fast music. By contrast, the
second main idea is an outburst of singing lyricism for
the viola. Bridge follows this opening drama not with a
slow movement but one with an intermezzo-like
quality. It is not, however, in the relaxed vein as the
term might suggest; instead it is a sinister minuet built
from the obsessive rhythm of the opening bar. Here is a
world of twilight shadows with the omnipresent rhythm
offset by outpourings of haunted melody frequently
exploiting the dark hues of the viola. In the concluding
rondo Bridge blows away the mood of the preceding
movement with music which proceeds by leaps and
bounds and increasingly takes on a confident character.
Such is the integrated thematic quality of the whole
work that allusions are made to the minuet's rhythm,
and just before the final appearance of the rondo theme
both subjects of the first movement are worked into the
music in a masterly fashion. A swift, bracing and
affirmative coda brings to an end the apogee of Bridge's
contribution to the genre of the string quartet.
Andrew Burn
String Quartet No. 2 in G minor (more info)
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I. Allegro ben moderato - 8:38
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II. Allegro vivo - Andante con moto - Tempo 1 - 6:39
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III. Molto adagio - Allegro vivace - 8:37
Phantasy, Piano Quartet in F sharp minor (more info)
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Phantasy, Piano Quartet in F sharp minor - 12:14
String Quartet No. 4 (more info)
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I. Allegro energico - Largamente - 11:30
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II. Quasi minuetto - 4:42
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III. Adagio ma non troppo - Allegro con brio - 7:13