I immediately began my
exploration of this stunning new CD of music by Peter Racine Fricker, with the
Adagio and Scherzo. These two pieces were composed during the summer of 1943
when the composer was in the Royal Air Force, working as a radio operator.
During that year Fricker married (Audrey) Helen Clench before being posted to
India as an Intelligence Officer, having recently participated in an ‘intensive
course’ learning Japanese.
Interestingly, the Adagio and
Scherzo are not listed in the University of California, Santa Barbara,
California catalogue of the composer’s music. Neither do they appear in the
current Grove’s list of works.
The liner notes, by Christopher
Husted, suggest that they may be the central movements of a projected string
quartet (String Quartet No.0!). At any rate, these two pieces ‘remain the most
thoroughly developed work from this time.’ Fricker’s ‘official Op.1’ are the
Three Preludes for piano composed between 1941-4.
The Adagio and Scherzo are
immediately approachable and reflect the modernism of the day with just a hint
of something undefinably ‘English’ in mood. The sound world of the two
movements alerts the listener to the foundation of Fricker’s style. He was not
an adherent to the hegemony of Ralph Vaughan Williams or William Walton. His
mentors were Berg, Hindemith, Bartok and Schoenberg. The basic premise of his
style was a free use of atonality rather than rigid serialism. Typically, this
would be his compositional style for much of his career.
It is not necessary to give a
detailed biography of the composer in this review, nevertheless a few notes
about his career may be of interest. Peter Racine Fricker was born in London on
5 September 1920. He was descended from the French playwright Jean Racine. Fricker
studied at St Paul’s School and then the Royal College of Music (RCM) where his
tutors were R.O. Morris for composition and Ernest Bullock for organ. He had
further lessons with the Hungarian emigré composer Mátyás Seiber at Morley
College. As noted above, he completed five years of war service between
1941-46.
Two early successes were his Wind
Quintet, op 5 (1947) and the Symphony No.1, op.9 (1949). The latter gained the
Koussevitzky award and was premiered at the 1950 Cheltenham Festival. The following year Fricker won the Art’s
Council Festival of Britain prize for his Violin Concerto. He accepted the
headship of music at Morley College (1952-64) and later Professor of Music
(1955-64) at the RCM.
In 1964, Fricker was visiting
professor of music at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and in 1970
he became Chair of the Music Department there. Peter Racine Fricker died in
Santa Barbara on 1 February 1990.
Fricker’s compositions include
five symphonies, several concertos, numerous chamber music pieces and various
piano and organ works as well as the major choral work The Vision of Judgement, recently released on Lyrita (REAM.1124)
For my review of Fricker’s String
Quartets, I rely heavily on the excellent liner notes by Christopher Husted.
Little has been written about the composer and his music: an ‘official’
biography is a desideratum for listeners and students of 20th
century British music.
There seems little doubt that
Michael Tippett’s corpus of string quartets inspired Fricker. Tippett had
composed his second and third essays in this form during the war years whilst
working at Morley College. He had extensively revised the First Quartet in 1943
(originally composed in 1935). At the same time, Fricker’s teacher Mátyás
Seiber had published a major study of the six Bartok quartets, and also began
work on his own Quartetto Lirico during 1948. As Husted suggests, ‘These alone
would pose example enough to any young composer; that the quartet was a
traditional medium for speculation, experiment, and demonstration of skill
could only have made it more attractive.’
Unmentioned in the liner notes is
another source of inspiration for the String Quartet No.1: Francis Routh (Contemporary
British Music, 1972) explains that it ‘resulted from sketches he made after
seeing an exhibition in Battersea Park of the work of Henry Moore.’
Work on the Quartet No.1 began in
1948, and the completed work was submitted for the Edwin Evans Prize. The
competition was won by Elizabeth Maconchy’s String Quartet No.5 (1948): Fricker
was given an honourable mention. Fricker’s quartet was premiered on 6 September
1949 at the Salle Erard on Great Marlborough Street, London.
The Quartet is composed in a
single movement, but incorporating elements of the less traditional slow-fast-slow
design. The harmonic language seems to hover between tonality and atonality.
The Times (9 June 1953) made clear that this was Fricker’s
first work ‘in this medium that made his creative qualities fully clear,
proclaiming him something more than a promising and talented, but possibly
flash-in-the-pan composer.’ Alan Frank was correct when he insisted that this
Quartet ‘showed purpose, consistency of style, and skill in exposing its ideas.’ The String Quartet No.1 was dedicated to Mátyás Seiber
The String Quartet No.2 was
written for the Amadeus Quartet during 1953. This work is less austere than the
previous example. The music is simultaneously lyrical and dramatic, and exhibits
considerable intensity. As the Times (op.
cit.) reviewer declared, this work ‘clarifies the composer’s powers as a
melodist…’
The quartet is written in three
movements, two slow-ish outer movements with a central scherzo. The opening ‘inquieto allegro’ is propelled by a
vigorous subject but also encompassing much reflective material. Francis Routh (1972) notes that ‘the
development section is unusual in that
an independent subject appears as a fugue…and combines later with the material
of the exposition.’ The
sprightly Scherzo is a kind of ‘ghostly dance.’ The final movement is
impressive: this is an adagio that builds up to a penetrating climax, and
includes references to the opening movement. The Quartet closes quietly. Although
presented at the end of piece, this is the heart of the work. The liner notes
point out that this quartet ‘remains
within friendly distance of tonal reference, with an agenda that pits E flat
against F sharp.’ The work is defined by
its craftsmanship: formally, the ‘technical fluency’ of the instrumentation and
the exposition of the musical material.
Peter Racine Fricker’s String
Quartet No. 2 was recorded in 1963 by the Amadeus Quartet and was issued on the
Argo label (ZRG5372 & RG5372). It was coupled with Benjamin Britten’s
String Quartet No. 2. I have not heard this recording.
It was to be more than 23 years
before Fricker turned to this genre again. By this time, he was living and
working in California. Fricker came to believe that the medium of the string
quartet was dead. The appearance of the American composer Elliot Carter’s
masterly String Quartet No.3 (1971) changed his view. Fricker’s own Quartet No.3
is dedicated to the American. The liner
notes are keen to point out this present work is not an ‘emulation’ or
‘pastiche’ of Carter, but develops Fricker’s own brand of ‘serial strategies.’
The work is in five movements of various lengths. The core of the work is the
central ‘adagio.’ This is ‘flanked’ by two fast movements which themselves are
‘flanked’ by two considerable ‘prestos.’ The finale is a set of eight
variations with an impulsive coda bringing the quartet to an exciting
conclusion.
The work remained un-played until
the 1984 Cheltenham Festival when it was premiered by the Chilingirian Quartet on 19th July.
The Villiers Quartet give a superb performance of all these works: Fricker
could not have wished for a better advocate of his corpus of String Quartets.
The liner notes are first-rate, and provide sufficient information for an
informed appreciation of this music.
During the early 1950s Fricker
was regarded by many critics and listeners as something of an enfant terrible. On
the other hand, he was deemed to be one of the most important rising stars of
his generation. Other names at that time included Humphrey Searle, Elisabeth
Lutyens and Iain Hamilton. All these composers have (sadly) slipped below the
horizon, having been caught between the conservatism of Vaughan Williams and
the avant-garde which developed in the nineteen fifties and included Peter
Maxwell Davies, Harrison Birtwistle and Alexander Goehr.
In Fricker’s case his removal to
California did not help him with the promotion of his music in the United
Kingdom.
In recent years, some steps have
been made towards reappraising Fricker’s (and the others) music, but it seems
that there is a long way to go before their names are (re)established in the
canons of British Music. The present disc, as well as the recent Lyrita edition
noted above, is a positive start in that rehabilitation.
Track Listing:
Peter Racine FRICKER
(1920-1990)
String Quartet No.1, op.8 (1948-49)
String Quartet No.2, op.20 (1952-53)
String Quartet No.3, (1976)
Adagio and Scherzo (1943)
Villiers Quartet: James Dickenson (violin), Tamaki Higashi
(violin), Carmen Flores (viola), Nicholas Stringfellow (cello)
NAXOS 8.571374
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
Oops, he was descended from Racine and not an ancestor.
ReplyDeleteI am grateful for this and your many other contributions, but it is clear that Mr Fricker was born in 1920 not 1950 as you indicate. This was clearly just a slip of the finger.
ReplyDeleteUpdated & corrected!!
ReplyDeleteJ