I approach a concert by the Heath with the feeling that I’ve already said all there is to say about them. I love their technical abilities: ensemble, precision, delicacy, passion. I love their musicality and I like the way they look on stage, especially now they play standing. I love the way the two powerful players at the heart of the quartet balance the brilliant fluidity of the first violin and the solidity and Continue reading Heath Quartet 23rd October 2016 – Review by Andrew Polmear
Reviews
Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Helen Simpson, (Schubert and Haydn)
Schubert Quartettsazt C minor D.703
This single movement presages the later quartets in its richness and variety of sonorities drawn from the four instruments. It is intense and disturbing in its opening and closing passages. The extreme energy is carried through from the first falling semitonal passage to the exuberantly rising contrasting central section. The abrupt shifts between angst and gentle lyricism are heard in this truly romantic aesthetic and they show Schubert’s writing for the quartet at its most inventive in 1820.
The Doric quartet performed this piece with great clarity and sophistication. We were swept along Continue reading Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Helen Simpson, (Schubert and Haydn)
Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Guy Richardson, (Bartok and Debussy)
Béla Bartok String Quartet No 4 (1928)
This, together with the music of the 3rd Quartet, includes some of the most uncompromising music Bartok wrote, but despite the level of dissonance and sometimes harshness of textures, is full of his energy, intensity of expression and ultimately is gloriously life-affirming.
After a slightly tentative start, the first movement, marked Allegro, really took off and had a wonderful sense of forward drive and rhythmic energy. The coda was very exciting Continue reading Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Guy Richardson, (Bartok and Debussy)
Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Joe Fuller, Latest 7
The Doric String Quartet tapped into something truly beautiful in the opening concert of Strings Attached’s 16/17 season. The night opened with Bartók: the quartet imbuing warmth and light into the dark but glorious tumult of his String Quartet No 4. Alex Redington’s quiet, subtle flurries on violin epitomised the quartet’s emotive, enjoyable performance of what might be considered a spiky piece by some.
Debussy’s String Quartet No 1 featured a striking and spirited attack in the first movement and the quartet brought the sheer lyricism of the piece to life in an enlivening performance. Cellist John Myerscough enthusiastically discussed their decision to perform Haydn last, explaining that the “king of the string quartet” should not be considered merely a pleasant opener but rather get the attention and framing he deserves. The exciting piece was vigorously played, a perfect ending to an inspired programme that showcased the diverse musical and emotional range of the string quartet form.
Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Richard Amey, Worthing Herald
First read the order of service!
Now you can imagine how the new Coffee Concert launch exploded into life. We were blitzed by Bartok 4 from a standing start as the Doric turned the tables on us with imaginative but calculating reverse concert planning.
Instead of an orthodox and commonplace academic chronological tour through four composers’ work, they turned the journey on its head Continue reading Doric String Quartet 20th September 2016 – Review by Richard Amey, Worthing Herald
Heath Quartet 27th March 2016 – Review by Richard Amey, Worthing Herald
Are we reaching the nirvanic stage where to report a Heath Quartet Coffee Concert could simply comprise three words: ‘Say no more’? Such is the listening satisfaction they now provide and the artistic Continue reading Heath Quartet 27th March 2016 – Review by Richard Amey, Worthing Herald
