The St Lawrence String Quartet and Diana Doherty on Oboe, Plays Music by Haydn, Dvořák and Mozart and Contemporary Music by Matthew Hindson and Gordon Kerry by Andrew Miller

2012_gordonkerry

Australian composer Gordon Kerry. Photo from musicaviva.com.au

City  Recital Hall, Sydney: 21 April 2012
The St Lawrence Quartet and Diana Doherty play in Melbourne on 24 April, Perth on 26 April, and Melbourne again on 28 April.

Joseph Haydn - String Quartet in F minor, op 20 no 5
Gordon Kerry – Elegy for String Quartet
Mozart - Oboe Quartet in F major, K370
Dvořák – String Quartet no. 14 in A flat major, op 105
Matthew HindsonRush for oboe and string quartet

The St Lawrence String Quartet
Geoff Nuttall – violin
Scott St John – violin
Lesley Robertson – viola
Christopher Costanza – cello

Diana Doherty – oboe

Such a broad range of small detail, an infinite diversity of subtle variations in tone, attack, dynamics etc., more than is practical even for a composer to write into a score, is possible, even common on the string instruments, especially the violin, and it seems to be much easier to find violinists capable of nuanced playing than any other instrument, flute, horn, oboe, for example, though maybe not piano, though these instruments are not directly comparable. The string quartet then presents so many musical possibilities not to mention possible combinations of musical personalities, for both the performer and composer, and such opportunities for experimentation with the genre’s huge density of detail, relative speed of composition, and fantastic possibilities at the frontiers of musical sound. It is easy too to compare a symphonist’s writing string quartets to a painter’s drawing of finished studies, and this tradition continues, even if new symphonies and operas are relatively rare, as we see here in this program which includes the newish work by Gordon Kerry whose pieces, like Ian Munro’s last year, will feature in most of this year’s chamber music concert tours organized by Musica Viva.

Read the full review on the Berkshire Review, an International Journal for the Arts!