For the first of two short concerts that the Chilingirian Quartet presented on the opening evening of the Kings Place Festival, they focused on two quartets by Joseph Haydn. Both were written in 1793 following a previous highly successful trip Haydn had made to England, and were intended to satisfy the demand of London audiences.
The String Quartet in C, Op. 74 no. 1 opened proceedings, with the pair of chords which begin the first movement (Adagio moderato) sounding admirably full-bodied. The succeeding theme and spirit of invention that inhabit the movement, indeed much of the quartet as a whole, found the musicians exploring the composer’s carefully crafted sinuous instrumental lines with much affection. A sense of light and shade was easily established and maintained. Some fiery moments were seized upon by lead violinist Levon Chilingirian and accentuated by his precision of tone. This was balanced by the intricate writing exposed by the illuminating playing of the other three instrumentalists.
Much in the way of subtlety marked out the playing of the second movement (Andantino), with the quartet appearing to take particular note of the grazioso (“graceful”) marking. In turn, each of the players made their presence felt, with Philip De Groote’s cello playing in particular being finely judged and unassumingly present. The third movement, a Minuet marked Allegro, was crisply articulated. This had the effect of showing the movement’s serious side before some warmth of feeling and humour also became apparent. The Vivace finale is one of the most brilliant movements Haydn wrote for a string quartet. The players of the Chilingirian Quartet explored its plethora of motifs with gusto, making much of the near-rusticity of some passages, where some higher instrumental lines are played over a quasi-bagpipe drone by the cello. Bringing the work to a close, a near orchestral sense of scale is demanded by Haydn in the final pages, which the Chilingirians duly delivered.