First Bridge quartet is essential listening
jsa | San Diego, CA United States | 02/20/2010
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Frank Bridge's first string quartet (1906), written in one month to meet the submission deadline for a music competition, is an inventive and appealing minor chamber masterpiece. Bridge, who studied violin and viola, wrote adeptly for strings - in my opinion, his chamber music is far and away his best work. The first quartet, twenty-nine minutes in this performance by the outstanding Maggini Quartet, holds your interest from the opening bars, is filled with good ideas, and is serious without ever being heavy. In short, an immensely rewarding piece of music.
The less accessible third quartet, which dates from considerably later in Bridge's career (1925-6), reflects a different aspect of the composer. Here lyricism has largely been replaced by agitation and dissonance; the Great War had had its effect as too had the atonal style of the Second Viennese School. The third quartet is quite different than one would expect from the composer of the lovely (and substantial) Phantasie Quartet and the like, and while I find it difficult listening it will appeal to those who appreciate Schoenberg, Webern and Berg.
Five stars for the first quartet, three for the third."