Arditti Quartet

The Arditti Quartet is a string quartet founded in 1974 and led by the British violinist Irvine Arditti. The quartet is a globally recognized promoter of contemporary classical music[1] and has a reputation for having a very wide repertoire. They first became known taking into their repertoire technically challenging pieces. Over the years, there have been personnel changes but Irvine Arditti is still at the helm, leading the group. The repertoire of the group is mostly music from the last 50 years with a strong emphasis on living composers. Their aim from the beginning has been to collaborate with composers during the rehearsal process. However, unlike some other groups, it is loyal to music of a classical vein and avoids cross-genre music. The Quartet has performed in major concert halls and cultural festivals all over the world and has the longest discography of any group of its type. In 1999, it won the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize for lifetime achievement, being the first and only group to date to receive this award.

Arditti Quartet
Arditti Quartet
Background information
OriginLondon
Years active1974 (1974)–present
Websitewww.ardittiquartet.co.uk
Members
Past membersSee text

Repertoire

The Arditti Quartet is dedicated to 20th century and contemporary works, a niche in chamber music where classical masters dominate.[2] While they only play a handful of works from before the 20th century, they require that their repertoire maintains the tradition that has been established in Europe for several centuries. They do not work with composers from fields such as jazz, pop or crossover.[3] They concentrate on those from the last fifty years, along with very new music, mostly repertoire specially written for the ensemble to premiere.[4][5]

The quartet is considered the authentic interpreters for many late 20th century composers,[6] with a reputation for mastering the most difficult and complex compositions.[3][7] They rarely improvise as their focus is on working with composers.[7] These composers range from those active in the early 20th century to the present and include Hans Abrahamsen, Thomas Adès[3], Luciano Berio, John Cage[6][9], Elliott Carter, Franco Donatoni, Pascal Dusapin, Henri Dutilleux, Brian Ferneyhough, Morton Feldman, Georg Friedrich Haas, György Kurtag, Helmut Lachenmann, György Ligeti, Witold Lutoslawski, Wolfgang Rihm, Giacinto Scelsi[10], and Iannis Xenakis.[8][9]

They have on occasion performed minimalist pieces such as Mishima by Philip Glass and the 1st quartet of Gavin Bryars which was written for them. Also works involving electronics are in their repertoire. York Holler's Antiphon, Kaija Saariaho's Nymphea and Roger Reynolds Ariadnes Thread. [7] In their first concert they played new compositions only, but by their second year, they decided that their repertoire needed to include works of the Second Viennese School and Bartók came soon after. Works from earlier in the 20th century as perspective followed and in the 1980s they incorporated Beethoven's Grosse Fuge. They have played Ligeti's Second Quartet and Xenakis 'Tetras' hundreds of times.[3][7]

The focus on new music is to have the ability to collaborate with the composer in the interpretation of the piece, something the group considers very important, both in how to play and the fact that they consider their work as a kind of service to composers, especially younger and the lesser-known.[3][4] Composers often make minor adjustments to their compositions after working with the quartet.[7] Norwegian composer Sven Lyder Kahrs calls the group the "Rolls-Royce" of quartets, in part because he does not have to explain how to play his music to them. They just know.[6]

In the past they have been compared to the Kronos Quartet but unlike them are not interested in crossover audiences or cross-genre pieces, but rather stick with the classical quartet form.[6] There are very few pieces common to both groups.[7]

History

The Quartet was founded in 1974 by Irvine Arditti with Levine Andrade, Lennox Mackenzie and John Senter while all were students at the Royal Academy of Music.[5][6] They modeled themselves on the La Salle Quartet of the United States, focused at first on the LaSalle repertoire, with the aim of supporting composers, playing the pieces as they want them played.[6][7] Very soon the size of their repertoire went way beyond what the LaSalle achieved or in fact any other group in the history of classical music.[10]

Arditti was born in London in 1953, and began his studies in violin and composition at the Royal Academy at the age of sixteen.[4] Arditti won prizes for violin and composition, but decided he was a better violinist and stopped composing.[7] The focus of the quartet on new music is due to Arditti's interest in it, which began with composing in his childhood and hearing music by Stockhausen, Ligeti and others of the avant garde of the 1960s.[3] It was later that Ardittí became aware of the work of the LaSalle Quartet. In his last year at the Royal Academy of Music the Quartet was founded, and it continued during the time he was in the London Symphony Orchestra from 1976-1980, after which he left the Orchestra in order to dedicate himself full-time to the quartet.[4]

The Quartet's first concert was in September 1974,[4] with the works of Krzysztof Penderecki, who was at the Royal Academy to receive an honorary degree. This gave the group a chance to collaborate with the composer, something they continue to do with composers ever since.[3][9] The quartet was named after Arditti because they needed a name in 24 hours, so they used his with the idea that it would be temporary, but the name stuck.[4]

In their early years, before the end of the 1970s, the ensemble performed and recorded all the quartets of Hans Werner Henze and Gyorgy Ligeti. They also began performing live on BBC.[3] They commissioned their first piece in 1977, Jonathan Harvey's String Quartet No. 1.[7]

The group continued to have success touring and recording in Europe but it was not until the success of Kronos Quartet that the ensemble came to the attention of US and Canadian audiences, with a tour in the late 1980s.[9]

Over more than four decades of its existence, the only founder member that remains is its leader Irvine Arditti.[6][7][9]

For the 40th anniversary of the quartet in 2014, one of the celebrations in London included a three-concert-in-one-day event, with works by fifteen different composers with whom their leader Arditti has been particularly closely associated, as well as the world premier or several new works.[11]

Recognition

The Quartet has a worldwide reputation as a leader for its interpretation of 20th century and contemporary new music,[7][12] receiving extensive critical praise.[6] They have been noted for their "...astonishing virtuosity and their willingness to extend the boundaries of what can be expected of a string quartet..."[8] However, they have also been criticized as being severe, dry and intellectual[6] with a "kind of high-flown rhetoric that almost seemed designed to show that 'new music' can live in a pretentiously self-absorbed world."[13]

Awards include the Deutsche Shallplatten Preis on various occasions, the Gramophone Award for best recording of contemporary music in 1999, 2002 and 2018, the Coup de Coeur Prize and Grand Prix from the Academie Charles Cros in 2004 and the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize for lifetime achievement in 1999. They are the first and only group to date to receive the Siemen Foundation prize.[3][6][7]

Concerts and recordings

The Quartet is highly active throughout the year, mostly with performing and recording and premiering between twenty and fifty new works each year, taking time off only during the summer and Christmas vacations.[7] They have performed hundreds of new works and commissions,[1] with a discography of over 200 CDs on over twenty labels,[10] by far the longest contemporary discography of any string quartet.[9] A complete archive of the quartet's work is located at the Sacher Foundation in Basel, Switzerland.[10]

Most of their performances are in concert halls[6] and festivals[3] within Europe, but they are known all over the world[6] and have performed extensively in the US, Canada, Korea, South America, Japan and Mexico. One special piece which Arditti himself arranged the commission involved not playing in a concert hall. This was Stockhausen's Helicopter quartet, which required each member to perform his part in his own helicopter, and be relayed to the ground electronically where the audience was listening in a concert hall.[6]

Discography

  • Hans Abrahamsen: String Quartets 1-4 (CD Winter & Winter 910 242-2, released 2017)
  • Harrison Birtwistle: The Tree of Strings, 9 Movements (CD: AEON AECD1217, released 2012)
  • John Cage: Music for Four, 30 Pieces (CD: MODE Mode17, released 1989)
  • John Cage: String quartet in four parts, Four (CD: MODE Mode27, released 1992)
  • Elliott Carter: String quartets 1–4, Elegy (CD: Et Cetera KTC 1065-66, released 1989)
  • Pascal Dusapin: String quartets 1–5, Musique Fugitive (CD: AEON AECD0983, released 2012)
  • Pascal Dusapin: String quartets 6-7 (Quartet 6 Hinterland for quartet and orchestra) |AEON]] AECD1753, released 2017)
  • Brian Ferneyhough: String quartets Sonatas (1), 2-6, Adagissimo, Dum Transissets I-IV, Exordium, string trio's 1994 + 1995 AEON AECD1335, released 2017)
  • Roberto Gerhard: String quartets 1–2, Chaconne (CD: AEON AECD1225, released 2010)
  • Jonathan Harvey: String quartets 1–4, String trio (CD: AEON AECD0975, released 2009)
  • Hans Werner Henze: String quartets 1–5 (CD: WERGO WER 60114/ 15-50, released 1986)
  • Toshio Hosokawa: String quartets Urbilder, Landscape I, Silent flowers, Floral fairy, Blossoming, Kalligraphie (CD: WERGO WER 6761 2, released 2013)
  • Toshio Hosokawa: Quintets Fragmente II with recorder, Landscape II with harp, Landscape V with sho + solos elegy for violin, threnody for viola, chant for cello, (CD: WERGO WER 6769 2, released 2014)
  • Helmut Lachenmann: String quartets 1, 2 and 3 (CD: KAIROS Kairos 0012662, released 2011)
  • György Ligeti: String quartets 1, 2 (CD: WERGO WER 60079-50, released 1988)
  • György Ligeti: String quartets 1, 2, 2 Movements, Ballad und tanz, Hyllning (CD: SONY SK62306, released 1996)
  • Conlon Nancarrow: String quartets 1, 3, Studie 15, 31, 33, 34, Toccata (CD: WERGO WER 6696 2, released 2007)
  • Hilda Paredes: Cuerdos del Destino, Canciones Lunáticos, Papalote, In Memoriam Thomas Kakuska (CD: AEON AECD0975, released 2015)
  • Karl Aage Rasmussen: Solos and Shadows; Surrounded by Scales / Bent Sørensen: Alman; Adieu; Angels' Music (CD Dacapo 9003/9003b, released 1990)
  • Arnold Schönberg: String quartets I–IV (CD: Montaigne/naive MO782024, released 1994)
  • Arnold Schönberg: Chamber Music (CD: Montaigne/naive MO782025, released 1995)
  • Karlheinz Stockhausen: Helikopter quartett (CD: Stockhausen Verlag CD 53A + B, released 1999)
  • Anton Webern: complete string trios and quartets (CD: Montaigne/naive MO782136, released1991)
  • Iannis Xenakis: complete string chamber music (CD: Montaigne/naive MO782005, released 1992)
  • John Zorn Myth and Mythopoeia (Tzadik, released 2014)

Other activities

Members of the group regularly conduct master classes in Europe, the United States and Canada, for performers and composers, generally in a guest capacity.[3][7] From 1982 to 1996, they worked with young composers at the Darmstadt International Summer Courses for New Music.[3][6][7] They also encourage younger quartets interested in new music.[3]

In 2013, they collaborated with the composer Brian Ferneyhough on a documentary called Climbing a Mountain which is about how the group prepares for the presentation of new pieces. It was created particularly for composers and music students to help them understand the rehearsal process.[12]

Members

  • Irvine Arditti (violin), 1974–
  • Ashot Sarkissjan (violin), 2005–
  • Ralf Ehlers (viola), 2003–
  • Lucas Fels (cello), 2006–

Past members

Second violin
Lennox Mackenzie, 1974–1983
Alexander Balanescu, 1983–1985
David Alberman, 1985–1994
Graeme Jennings, 1994–2005
Viola
Levine Andrade, 1974–1990
Garth Knox, 1990–1997
Dov Scheindlin, 1997–2002
Cello
John Senter, 1974–1976
Helen Liebmann, 1976–1977
Rohan de Saram, 1977–2005

References

  1. "The Arditti Quartet: 40 Years Young". London: Barbican. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  2. Richard Fairman (13 May 2011). "Arditti Quartet". Financial Times. London. p. 11.
  3. Max Nyffeler (5 April 1999). "The Arditti Quartet Interview with Irvine Arditti". Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  4. Bruce Duffie. "Violinists Irvine Arditti and David Alberman". Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  5. "The Arditti Quartet". Boston: Institute of Contemporary Art. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  6. Inge Kjemtrup (October 2004). "Paving Their Own Paths: Modern Motif - Arditti Quartet Celebrates 30 Years of Collaboration with Contemporary Composers". 19 (3). Strings: 57, 59–60, 62–63. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. Claire Sykes (August–September 1999). "The Arditti Quartet". 14 (2). Strings: 58–71. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. Andrew Clements (28 April 2014). "Arditti Quartet review – the virtuosic group celebrate their 40th anniversary". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  9. Kyle Gann (3 March 1988). "Music Notes: the Arditti Quartet, an underground legend". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  10. "Biography". Arditti Quartet. Retrieved 8 May 2015.
  11. Richard Fairman (30 April 2014). "Arditti Quartet: CLASSICAL MUSIC". Financial Times. London. p. 13.
  12. "Strings on Screen - Arditti Quartet Reveals Tricks of the Trade". Targeted News Service. Washington DC. 27 July 2011.
  13. Ivan Hewett (16 November 2013). "Arditti Quartet, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, review". Telegraph. London. Retrieved 8 May 2015.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.