2010
17'
2vn.va.vc
1st perf:
Allegri String Quartet
King’s Place, 19 Dec 2010
Many subsequent performances
British Composer Award Winner
Private recording
Self-published
Programme note:
Thirty-two years after composing his First String Quartet (for the Chilingirian Quartet), Payne returned to the genre at the invitation of this evening's performers. In common with many of his pieces, it is written in a single movement. The composer admits it is quite difficult to write about the piece: there is no poetic aura as such, nor an autobiographical angle to cite. Instead, the work is simply 'pure structure'. This was the inspiration, hence the 'hell for leather' opening - the composer's words again - in which each instrument is given a bow in the form of a long musical sentence. This material is developed and varied at some length interrupted by brief allusions to slow music which may be considered to have been playing out of our leaving on some other plane. This music then comes to the fore and yields a proper slow section which balances the musical argument. If, at this point, a ternary form might be expected to unfold (that is, for the return of the 'A' section to complete an A-8-A model), then the extended coda that actually follows is its substitute. In any case, its aesthetic is intended to be quite different. As Payne describes: 'emotionally, the ending evaporates into space.'
17'
2vn.va.vc
1st perf:
Allegri String Quartet
King’s Place, 19 Dec 2010
Many subsequent performances
British Composer Award Winner
Private recording
Self-published
Programme note:
Thirty-two years after composing his First String Quartet (for the Chilingirian Quartet), Payne returned to the genre at the invitation of this evening's performers. In common with many of his pieces, it is written in a single movement. The composer admits it is quite difficult to write about the piece: there is no poetic aura as such, nor an autobiographical angle to cite. Instead, the work is simply 'pure structure'. This was the inspiration, hence the 'hell for leather' opening - the composer's words again - in which each instrument is given a bow in the form of a long musical sentence. This material is developed and varied at some length interrupted by brief allusions to slow music which may be considered to have been playing out of our leaving on some other plane. This music then comes to the fore and yields a proper slow section which balances the musical argument. If, at this point, a ternary form might be expected to unfold (that is, for the return of the 'A' section to complete an A-8-A model), then the extended coda that actually follows is its substitute. In any case, its aesthetic is intended to be quite different. As Payne describes: 'emotionally, the ending evaporates into space.'