Piano Quartet No. 1 by Gerald Barry
This piano quartet was
commissioned by the Institute of Contemporary Arts and first performed in London in 1992.
Chamber work – A quartet four
4 instruments.
Piano
Violin
Viola
Cello
This genre of chamber music
was established in Classical and Baroque era.
Example of Twentieth century
contemporary music.
Inspirations from traditional
Irish melodies:
Þ
Sí Bheag Sí Mhór
Þ
Lord Mayo
Þ
‘Tis the last
Rose of Summer
Þ
Beidh Aonach
Amárach
Fuses these melodies with his
own individual style, extra notes added and taken away, and original melodies
become almost unrecognisable.
Abstract music – it does not
tell a story
Instrumental line more
important than instrumental colour to Barry
Quartet begins and ends with
music that is heard only once
Section C is central dominant
material, occurs 9 times, yet never exact repetition
Piano:
Þ
Creates contrasting
textures with strings
Þ
Doubles string
parts – very often
Þ
Plays one, or
more, voices in canon
Þ
Introduces
dissonance
Þ
Plays note
cluster
Þ
Solo section –
“Hommage Á horowitz”
Instruments techniques
·
Open strings
·
Hand clusters on
piano
·
Harmonics –
delicate wispy sound
·
Détaché –
detached – separate bow for each note
·
Flautando – bow
over the fingerboard
Form
- Quartet – one movement – 18 sections
- Eight different themes – (4 appear only once)
A B1 C1 C2 B2 C3 D1 D2+D3 E1
C4 C5 E2+D3 C6 C7 F+C8 C9 G
H
- Unusual form – does not fit any standard form
- No recapitulation
- Ends with 3 new sections – F G and H – very unusual
- Unusual rondo form – because of constant recurrence of C
Tonality
- Mainly atonal
- Section A (based on Sí bheag sí mhór) is pentatonic – no 7th notes, uses only 4th in final bars
- B and B1 refer to key of C with a recurring C sharp
- C1 in A flat
- E2 + D3 – only section with noted key signature – b flat minor
Rhythmic Features
- Over 330 time signature changes
- Unusual time signatures – 1/8, 5/8
- Complex rhythmic patterns
- Irregular rhythms and irregular patterns
- Polymetry – combining different metres simultaneously
- Metronome marks for tempo changes.
Compositional Features
·
Canon - many
times, from 2 part to 5 part,
- eg 4 part canon on inversion of “Sí
bheag sí mhór”
·
Retrograde - melody
played backwards
- eg.
Melody in E1 is retrograde of melody D2
·
Augmentation - notes
values are lengthened, usually doubled
- eg. C8
· Diminution - notes
value are shortened
- eg.
B1 notes are halved in B3
·
Wedging - making intervals bigger
- eg C2
and C3
·
Splicing - making intervals smaller
- eg C2 and C3
·
Inversion - melody turned upside down
- Eg, “Sí Bheag Si Mhór” in section A
·
Counterpoint - combining
2 themes – polyphonic
- Eg D2
and B3
·
Telescoping - Fragments
of previous sections in a short section
- Eg
Section G
Section A
- Based on inversion of “Sí Bheag Sí Mhór"
- Four part canon at distance of a crotchet, yet all begin at same time
- Feeling of C major
- Mainly ¾, but time signature changes
Contemporary features
- Harmonics
- Open strings
- Canon at distance of a crotchet
- Time signature changes
Non-contemporary features
- Instruments
- Use of canons
- Repetition
- Range
- Staccato
- 2 bass clefs
Section A1
- Starts to develop
- Loud dynamics
- Very high register and wide range
- Piano entirely in bass cleft
- Five part canon
- Harmonics – open strings
- Very polyphonic
- Two part piano
- Page repeated, louder 2nd time.
Section B
- Key of C major with a persistent C sharp.
- Atonal
- Homophonic
- Rhythmic melody on violin, starts with an upbeat in ¾ time
- Drone like staccato two note pattern on viola – like hurdy gurdy
- Slower speed
- Sudden change of time signature to 5/8 – instability and imbalance
- Cello part is inversion of viola two note pattern.
- Repeated from bar 72 with cello added
- From bar 90, melody is repeated on all 3 string instruments, playing an octave apart.
- Melody repeated without accompaniment
- Piano plays hand clusters, span of 2 octaves
- Dynamics very loud
Section C1
- Strings only
- Polyphonic
- 2 melodies – violin and viola
- Feeling of A flat
- Flow of melodies interrupted by abrupt time signature changes
- Harmonics on cello
- From Bar 124:
- repeated an octave lower
- piano introduced
- Takes music from “Tis the last rose of summer”
- Louder and faster
- Piano doubles string parts
Section C2
- Based on C1
- Atonal
- Violin and viola melodies
- Polyphonic
- Slower
- Softer dynamics
- Wedging and splicing
- No piano
Section B2
- B section melody played 5 times in canon creating
polyphonic texture, varied, slightly different each time
- Bar 170:
- Three part canon at distance of crotchet
- Very loud
- Viola, violin and cello
- Bar 188 on and bar 205:
- Three part canon on strings
- Piano doubles string parts at the octave in bass
clef
- Bar 222
- Three part canon in 5ths at octave on strings and piano
- Violin and viola doubles, cello and piano R.H doubled with LH piano in 5ths
- Double stopping on violin
- Soft dynamics and light articulation
- Bar 239:
- Repeat of canon from previous part
- Drone effect using adjacent open strings
- Pedal note D in cello
- Double stopping on strings
- Very loud
Section
C3
·
Based on four
different versions of C
·
Gets louder an
faster each time
·
Polyphonic
·
Bar 256:
·
Viola and cello
repeat C2 with descant melody on violin
·
Violin doubles
cello part at intervals of 2nd and 7th – dissonance
·
Slow
·
Quieter
·
No piano
·
Bar 272:
·
Single fragmented
piano line, doubles some strings parts at interval of 2nd
·
Faster and louder
than previous
·
Double stopping
·
Bar 288:
·
Higher pitch –
cello in treble clef
·
Both melodies
doubles at dissonant intervals on piano in bass clef
·
Faster an louder
·
Bar 303:
·
Violin higher
·
Piano LH doubles
RH at interval of 2nd
Section D1
- Based on Beidh Aonach Amárach
- Shortest section
- A minor
- Shortest time sig in piece used – 1/8
- Loud
- Homophonic
- Hurdy gurdy effect in cello (similar to B1)
- Very unstable due to time signature changes
- 3/16 time signature – contemporary – not usual
- Repeated notes in melody on viola
Section D2+B3
- Both sections heard simultaneously
- D2 on violin and piano RH, B3 on viola and cello, both in unison
- B melody is in diminution (note values halved)
- Piano LH plays hurdy gurdy in thirds
- B3 becomes rhythmically distorted – adds tension
- Music repeated at bar 344 with different time signatures, some notes left out
- Polyphonic
Section E1
- 4 part canon at distance of quaver at the octave, violin, viola, cello, LH piano
- D2 played in reverse (retrograde)
- Repeat sign
- Changing time signatures - obscure
- Polyphonic
- Loud with accented notes
Section C4
- Hommage á Horowitz
- Piano solo – only instrument with solo section
- Very very loud
- Derived from C melodies
- Both hands play in octaves
- Homophonic
- Flamboyant
- Dedicated to Horowitz a Russian pianist
Section C5
- Shortened version of C3
- Slower
- 3 part canon distance of a crotchet
- Soft dynamics
- Changing time signatures
- No piano
- Canon repeated at bar 415 with some notes left out
Section E2 + D3
- Only section with a noted key signature – B flat minor
- E and D combined and up a semitone to B flat minor
- Polyphonic
- Very loud, with accented notes
- E2 is a retrograde of D and heard on violin and viola in unison
- D3 heard on cello an piano RH in unison
- Music repeated at bar 442 with violin an octave higher and piano LH octave lower
Section C6
- 3 part canon at distance of a quaver
- C6 is C5 up a semi-tone and shortened
- Instruments technique flautando used - Played on finger board giving a wispy sound
- Polyphonic
- Soft dynamics
Section C7
- Based on C material but sounds like a new section – contrasts, different speed and dynamics
- Cello based on one of original C melodies
- Canon in violin and viola based on inversion of C6
- Piano doubles string parts
- Notes added at distance of 2nds 4ths and 5ths – adds dissonance
- Polyphonic
- Bar 483:
- Faster
- Double stopping adds to intensity
- Higher pitch, accelerates then stops suddenly
Section F + C8
- One bar rest, then new material, F, on violin
- Triplets I melody, jig rhythm, Irish dance music
- Piano part is retrograde of F melody
- C material heard in augmentation (longer notes) on viola and cello
- Polyphonic
- Different time signatures used simultaneously –
polymetry
Section C9
- One bar rest then 3 part canon two octaves distance of crotchet on strings
- Shortest and slowest version of C
- Polyphonic
- Wide distance between parts, high pitch in
violin, low pitch in cello
Section G
- New music but derived from rest of quartet
- Telescoping – complete work in nine bars by taking notes from beginning an end of each section
- Homophonic
- Very fast
- Very loud with accented notes
- Constantly changing time signatures
Section H
- Based on Irish tune, “Lord Mayo’s Delight”
- Polyphonic
- 2 part canon, unison, distance of crotchet on viola cello
- Flautando used again
- Bar 542:
- 3 part canon, unison, distance of crotchet,
viola, cello and Piano LH, base on second part of tune
- Bar 558
- Final section return to first part of tune
- 3 part canon, unison, distance of crotchet, violin, viola, cello
- Soft dynamics
- Some notes omitted in violin part as outside range of instrument and are filled by viola
- Piano plays final note D in bass creating
unfinished open effect at end.