London String Quartet
The London String Quartet was a string quartet founded in London in 1908 which remained one of the leading English chamber groups into the 1930s, and made several well-known recordings.
Personnel
The personnel of the London String Quartet was:1st Violin:
- Albert Sammons
- James Levey
- John Pennington
- Thomas W. Petre
- H. Wynne Reeves
- Edwin Virgo
- Herbert Kinsey
- Harry Waldo Warner
- Philip Sainton
- William Primrose
- Charles Warwick Evans
Origins
In 1908 Warwick-Evans was leader of the Queen's Hall violoncellos and Waldo Warner was first viola in the New Symphony Orchestra. Warwick-Evans formed the idea of a string quartet worked up to the standard of a solo virtuoso, and approached Waldo Warner. He was enthusiastic, and then Petre was found and finally Albert Sammons, the new Concertmaster of Thomas Beecham's orchestra, to lead the quartet.
They rehearsed four times a week for nearly two years before giving their first concert. There was to be no 'boss': if anyone disagreed with tempo or phrasing he spoke out, the point was discussed, and the decision made if necessary by voting. The first concert was on 26 January 1910, at Bechstein Hall, as the 'New' Quartet, playing Dohnanyi in D flat, Tchaikovsky in D, and a Fantasy Quartet of Waldo Warner's. Reviews were excellent: the second concert was in June 1910, of Debussy in G minor, Beethoven Op. 59 no. 1, and a Fantasy of Balfour Gardiner's. Warwick-Evans suggested the name 'London String Quartet' and in 1911 it was adopted.
At the outbreak of war, 1914, Warwick-Evans and Waldo Warner could not serve for health reasons. Petre served in France and his place was taken successively by Wynn Reeves, Herbert Kinsey, and Edwin Virgo. Albert Sammons, meanwhile, was building a solo career and had less time for essential rehearsals. In May 1915 the quartet began to give chamber music 'Pops', much liked in wartime London. By May 1917 they had given 50, and at about that time Sammons left and was replaced by James Levey, a pupil of Ferdinand Hill's. The last of these concerts, the 117th, was on 14 July 1919.
In 1920 the suggestion was made that they should perform a one-week cycle of the complete Beethoven quartets, and this was done first in Edinburgh, then in London, then Stockholm, Christiania, and variously in America, in all ten cycles including three in London. In September 1920 they were introduced to America by Mrs Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge at Pittsburgh, playing Frank Bridge's E minor Quartet, Beethoven in E minor, and Waldo Warner's Folk-song Fantasy.
In addition to a great number of concerts in London and England they undertook many international tours, notably to America, France, Portugal, Spain, Scandinavia, and Canada. From November 1922 to April 1924 they conducted a world-tour.
Their prestige in America, North and South, was very considerable, and they travelled from Canada to Buenos Aires, performing much new music as well as Beethoven quartet cycles. By the late 1920s they had introduced around one hundred new pieces of music to the repertory. Their disbanding, in November 1934, was prompted by John Pennington having been appointed to the concertmaster's chair in San Francisco. Thereafter all but violist Primrose – who joined Toscanini's NBC Symphony Orchestra as co-principal – moved to Hollywood studios. In 1941 the quartet reformed for concerts in Los Angeles and performed at summer concerts and other recitals. Primrose pursued his distinguished career as a soloist and was replaced by Cecil Bonvalot, and subsequently Edgardo Acosta. The quartet formally disbanded in 1952.
The quartet was one of the most important international groups of its time. Numerous premieres, Beethoven cycles, widespread concertising, and eminent recordings marked out its trajectory. The 'live' Library of Congress recordings demonstrate its most vital, sensitive and convincing musicianship in ways that even its studio discs occasionally fail to show. They provide irrefutable evidence that the quartet was one of the very greatest of its time.
Irving Kolodin wrote:
'In the Flonzaley's later years,... they seemed to have become a committee of experts matching exquisite swatches of tonal texture rather than performers of music. For young ears, the rise of the London String Quartet dimmed the Flonzaley star even as it was waning. A more vibrant enthusiasm, a stronger sense of tonal colours, a refinement that was not raffiné, gave them pre-eminence as long as this personnel endured. This, in truth, was not long, and though Levey's successor was John Pennington of the honeyed tone, and William Primrose first showed his prowess as a violist in Waldo Warner's place, it was not the same thing.'
As live Library of Congress recordings irrefutably demonstrate, Kolodin's implication that the Levey-led quartet declined when Pennington and Primrose took their places in the ensemble is very much wide of the mark.
Harry Waldo Warner won distinction as a composer of chamber music, including six published string quartets and a trio. The first two quartets were one-movement works described as Phantasies for the purposes of the Cobbett Prize, which was won by both. The third in C minor is in four movements, though the slow movement and scherzo are linked: the fourth is a Phantasy based on an English folk-song, with many variations. The fifth is a Suite called 'The Pixy Ring', each movement being concerned with fairy lore, and the sixth is a Suite of four movements described as being in the 'Olden Style'.
Recordings
The group made prolific early recordings in the days of the pre-electric recording horn, when it was difficult to obtain clear sound from string chamber groups. The 1917 premiere recording of the Vaughan Williams song-cycle On Wenlock Edge, with Gervase Elwes and Frederick B. Kiddle is deservedly famous, and has James Levey as first violin. This remained in the catalogue until at least 1933.Acoustic recordings also include the following works:
- Beethoven: Quartets Nos. 1 : 2 : 3 : 6 : 8 : 14.
- Brahms: Quartet No. 2.
- Elgar: String Quartet in E minor.
- Haydn: Quartet in B, Op. 64, No. 3 : Quartet in D, Op. 64, No. 5 : Quartet in C, Op. 76, No. 3 :
- Kreisler: Quartet.
- Mendelssohn: Quartet No. 1.
- Mozart: Quartets Nos. 14 : 15 : 21 : Quintet 4.
- Schubert: Quartet No. 13 : Trout Quintet : Quartet in D minor 'Tod und das Mädchen'...
- Schumann: Quartet No. 1 : Piano Quintet.
- Smetana: Quartet No. 1.
- Warner: Quartet in C.
- Schubert: Quartett-satz in C minor. .
- Schubert: Quintet in A major 'The Trout', with Ethel Hobday and Robert Cherwin...
- Schubert: Quintet in C major op 163 with Horace Britt...
- Franck: Quartet in D major..
- Beethoven: Quartet in A minor op 132..