Chinese Whispers (Waterhouse)

Chinese Whispers is a composition for string quartet in three movements by Graham Waterhouse. Premiered in 2010, it combines elements from the music of China with composition techniques of Western classical music. Similar to the children's game, phrases change as they pass from part to part. The work was awarded the "BCMS Composition Prize" of the Birmingham Chamber Music Society in 2011.

Chinese Whispers
String quartet by Graham Waterhouse
The composer in 2011
Year2010 (2010)
Periodcontemporary
Movements3
Scoringtwo violins, viola, cello

History

The impetus for the composition came from a European family living in Shanghai. They wanted music combining aspects of Eastern and Western culture for their two eldest children to play with two Chinese musicians.[1]

Movements

  1. Lento – Adagio e maestoso – Moderato
  2. Allegro (pizzicato)
  3. Vivace

Music

The work uses Chinese elements such as the pentatonic scale, seen from the perspective of a classically trained European composer. The title refers to the children's game in which a message is whispered from one child to the next and slowly changes. This process, a phrase changing almost imperceptibly as it passes from part to part, is a compositional procedure of the piece.[1]

The composer describes the work: "The first movement opens with the stylized chiming of a great imaginary temple bell, as if calling to attention." The themes in the following "Moderato" occasionally use pentatonic scale in modes shown to the composer by the Chinese Jinghu player. Different from Chinese music, the thematic material is developed.[1]

The second movement is like a Scherzo and Trio in ambiguous triple/duple time. Played almost entirely pizzicato with the exception of ten bars in the centre of the movement, it is "a study in texture and voice-leading, combining the brittle pizzicato of the E-string of the violin with the resonant lower strings of the cello".[1]

The last movement recalls the Rondo-form, but "the main theme is forever changing and re-inventing itself. A short violin cadenza "seems to caricature the perpetual forward momentum of the work, deceiving the listener with speed changes and abrupt changes of rhythmic direction".[1]

Selected performances

The work was first tried in the opening concert of the National Chamber Music Course, a summer course in Preston, UK, where the composer has worked as an instructor. The first professional performance was played at the Gasteig in Munich on 14 November 2011, combined with the composer's Piccolo Quintet.[2] It appeared in a concert in Gilching of chamber music by Beethoven and Waterhouse, together with Rhapsodie Macabre for piano and string quartet, played by Valentina Babor.[3] A review in the Süddeutsche Zeitung noted its diverse colours, from delicate translucency to dashing folklore.[4]

Award

The work received the chamber music prize of the Birmingham Chamber Music Society (BCMS), the "BCMS Composition Prize", in the society's 60th anniversary season. It was performed on 18 February 2012 by the Poggi String Quartet in the Adrian Boult Hall of the Birmingham Conservatoire, together with works of Schubert (Trout Quintet), Britten (Lachrymae) and the premiere of Berceuse by John McCabe, a commission of the BCMS.[5][6] The review noted: "A totally accessible work depicting the mysterious East, very oriental – smiling music".[7]

References

  1. "Chinese Whispers für Streichquartett". Graham Waterhouse. 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  2. "Konzertante Musik für Flöte und Streicher". Gasteig. 2011. Archived from the original on 10 September 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  3. "Klavierquartett und Rhapsodie Macabre / Kammermusik mit Klavier von Beethoven und Waterhouse" (PDF) (in German). Kulturforum Gilching. 11 February 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  4. "Frisch und wild / Packende Kammermusik in Gilching" (PDF) (in German). Süddeutsche Zeitung. 13 February 2012. Retrieved 18 February 2012.
  5. "Conservatoire Tutors Ensemble". Birmingham Chamber Music Society. 18 February 2012. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  6. "Birmingham Chamber Music Society Recital". Graham Waterhouse. 18 February 2012. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  7. Cotton, Maggie (24 February 2012). "Review: Birmingham Chamber Music Society, at Adrian Boult Hall". Birmingham Post. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
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