Meyer was a professor of music theory at the Krakow Music
Academy from 1975 until 1987 and, from 1987 to his retirement in 2008, was professor
of composition at the Music Academy in Cologne. He was President of the Polish
Composers’ Union from 1985 until 1989 and is a member of the Free Academy of
the Arts in Mannheim. Meyer knew Dmitri Shostakovich personally and wrote a
biography about the composer.
Krzysztof Meyer’s musical roots are in East European
neoclassicism, though in the 1960’s he was fascinated with the avant-garde not
only as a composer, but as a member of "MW2 Ensemble", with whom he
performed experimental pieces, typical for the sixties, in Poland and in some
West European countries.
He is firmly convinced that the time has come again to think
about a new kind of melodic and harmonic language. The melodic primordial cell
as the germ for the formal design of the individual work is characteristic of
his music.
His works to date include operas, vocal works, seven
symphonies, numerous concertos, chamber music including thirteen string
quartets and works for solo instruments.
His Symphony No. 1 was his first work to be performed, in
1964, in Kraków. In 1965, while still a student, he made his debut at the
‘Warsaw Autumn’, as the youngest composer in the Festival’s history with his
String Quartet No. 1.
It is his String Quartet No. 1, Op.8 (1963) that together
with his String Quartets No’s 2, 3 and 4 have been issued on a new release from
Naxos www.naxos.com with the Wieniawski
String Quartet www.naxos.com/person/Wieniawski_String_Quartet/84817.htm
8.573165 |
Meyer’s String
Quartet No.1, Op.8 (1963) is very much the kind of work that one would
expect of a Polish composer from the 1960’s that was interested in the avant-garde.
The opening Tesi (Thesis) has curious
pizzicato phrases and bow taps before, slowly, little motifs appear across the
strings. Before long a rhythmic fast passage descends to slow sonorous chords
before the movement develops through a series of wild passages. A glissando
passage from the lower strings leads to a quieter ruminative conclusion. Antitesi
(antithesis) has little outbursts that populate this second movement to which a
melody tries to join but the outbursts continue over a bass harmony. The third
and final movement, Sintesi (summary)
opens with an undulating theme on the cello before all the players enter
playing glissando. Outbursts occur, at
first vying with one another then combining to form a more blended sound. The
music resumes a frantic sound before falling to tentative phrases exquisitely
played by the Wieniawski Quartet, with such fine detail. Richer chords lead to
the coda.
Meyer’s String
Quartet No.2, op.23 (1969) is in one movement and opens with sudden chords
from all players before the material is developed into a densely layered theme.
The opening chords are repeated before the densely layered theme returns. The
music then fragments into individual pizzicato and col legno phrases before
quietening to a tentative passage with more pizzicato and harmonics. The music
broadens, though still a little tentative, before developing into a dense
passage of string textures becoming quite intense and full of angst. This
dissipates into a passage reminiscent of the opening phrases. Eventually there
arrives a long held note with little outbursts before a lovely melody appears
quite unexpectedly. It tries to trip itself up but nevertheless continues.
Eventually it does fragment but slowly turns into a quiet harmony to end.
There is some terrific playing from the Wieniawski Quartet,
great precision, ensemble and dynamics.
String Quartet No.3,
Op.27 (1971) has its three movements
simply marked I, II and III. I. opens
with a sudden pizzicato outburst, by now making one assume that this is a
hallmark of Meyer’s style. However, this is soon dispelled by an outpouring of
fast, forward moving, swirling strings before quietening to a slower passage
that seems to have an underlying melody hovering behind it. There are, again, pizzicato
interruptions before a more flowing theme but the pizzicato can’t be held back
and returns in an intricate motif. The contrast between the more flowing theme
and the pizzicato continues before a sonorous string passage arrives, underlined
by a cello played pizzicato in its lower register. The fast moving swirling
theme returns before harmonic phrases quietly appear at the end.
The second movement, II,
follows on in much the same vein, with a theme that is always seemingly
combating pizzicato phrases in constantly changing sounds and textures. Movement III
opens with a vibrant unison outpouring with a real sense of forward momentum
and direction. There is more densely packed music to follow, with various
instruments providing their own little details and motifs. A repeated pizzicato
phrase in unison heralds a series of motifs, slowly increasing in volume, as
though rising from below. Eventually a mournful theme slowly arises, surely the
finest moment in this quartet that continues to the end, seeming to achieve a
kind of resolution.
There is an impassioned opening Preludio interrotto to String Quartet No.4, Op.33 (1974) before
Meyer’s favoured pizzicato interrupts. This tension between the impassioned
theme and pizzicato playing continues until a tentative passage is introduced,
opening on the cello and leading to a richer section, growing in intensity in a
tremendously dramatic passage that pulls the listener along before falling to a
quieter version of the same theme then fragmenting to nothing. The opening
densely rich music suddenly reappears to end the movement.
The second movement, Ostinato,
opens with a single pizzicato chord before a little motif is plucked in the
sparest of gestures. Fuller pizzicato chords interrupt in this ruminating
opening with some first rate playing from the Wieniawski Quartet. Longer bowed
phrases appear against pizzicato notes leading to a broad melody, still with
little pizzicato interruptions. Quicker, more incisive phrases appear against
the insistent pizzicato notes, becoming increasingly insistent and passionate,
at times reminiscent of Bartok. Gradually the music quietens to a deep
ruminative melody to end. Pizzicato from the cello opens the third movement, Elegia e conclusion, contrasting with
pizzicato on the other strings. The cello then plays a bowed melody, full of
passion and feeling against little pizzicato notes. The melody builds across
the quartet in a mournful outpouring that is very beautiful but eventually the
music falls to spare pizzicato notes. Towards the end there is an impassioned
outburst for full quartet before the music grows sparer and fades out in the highest
registers of the strings.
Whilst retaining a distinctive style, Meyer is shown to have
progressed some distance between his first and fourth quartets. If any
composers come to mind as influences it must be those of the Second Viennese
School and Bartok yet Meyer has a distinctive voice. The Wieniawski String
Quartet give terrific performances of these works and the recording is first
rate with excellent booklet notes.
Whilst the earlier quartets are fascinating works, it is the
fourth quartet that makes me want to investigate the later quartets already
issued on three individual Naxos CDs.
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8.572656 |
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