String Sextet (1996)
i. Allegro moderato (Praeludium)
ii. Lento Agitato (Scherzo and Shadow)
iii. Risoluto Alla danza (Chaconne)
with Julia O'Riordan (viola) & Caroline Dale (cello)
Quintet for Flute & Strings (2003)
i. Moderato
ii. Poco adagio
iii. Vivace
with Robert Stallman (flute)
Quintet for Clarinet & Strings (2007)
i. Gently paced: lyrical
ii. Bright and skittish
iii. Subdued and meditative
iv. Emphatic, with drive
with John Bradbury (clarinet)
String Quartet no.2 (1987)
i. Allegretto: poco agitato
ii. Andante piacevole
iii. Allegro di molto
iv. Nocturne (Andante)
v. Capriccio agitato
vi. Allegro
String Quartet no.8 (2005)
i. Bright and purposeful
ii. With a gentle and plangent motion
iii. Steady and unyielding
String Quartet no.9 (2006)
i. Andante
ii. Animato
iii. Calmo
iv. Alla marcia
The Tippett Quartet
John Mills (violin)
Jeremy Isaac (violin)
Maxine Moore (viola)
Bozidar Vukotic (cello)
Julia O'Riordan (viola) replaces Maxine Moore
World premiere recordings
Recorded: St Silas Church, Chalk Farm, London, 31 January 2008; 1 February 2008; 3-4 March 2009; 18-19 January 2010
In a long and distinguished career, Stephen Dodgson (b.1924) has produced works in almost every form. An acute ear and sharp sense for instrumental sonorities have drawn him particularly to chamber music. His nine acknowledged string quartets (four more were withdrawn) are among the most important written by a modern English composer, and range from works of an almost Bartkian intensity to pieces in which his light touch and sometimes mischievous wit show in music owing much to early English music and a love of the dance. His most recent quartet, the Ninth, is a fine example of how serious things can be said in a light-hearted manner. It also shows how outstanding craftsmanship is used by a true composer in the service of music and not for display, to aid and not confuse the listener. His love of virtuosity is, characteristically, shown in the dazzlingly effective music he writes for instrumentalists whose skill and character he admires, as with the Flute Quintet. In the Clarinet Quintet, another virtuoso work, the soloist is also asked to be by turns bright and skittish' as well as sweet and songful' and subdued and meditative'. Contrast is a typical ingredient of Dodgson's music, as when the finale of his richly textured Sextet ends with a dance over the formality of a subtle chaconne.
2 CD SET - CDLX 7265
Idiomatic performances and a warmly immediate recording, making for a fine conclusion to this worthwhile series.
A Canon Surveyed, Richard Whitehouse, Gramophone, September 2011
... the Tippetts show sustained excellence in faultless sound.
Malcolm Hayes, BBC Music Magazine, August 2011