Review, Bristol Ensemble, Messiaen’s Quartet for the End of Time, Bristol 1904 Arts by James Ellis


 out of 5 stars (4 / 5)

In what might be most curious venue discovery this year, the city would give up its secrets thanks to the Bristol Ensemble and a stirring gig at Bristol 1904 Arts. Located next door to The Red Lodge, with cute maze gardens and TGI Fridays wall décor saw art, instruments and other oddities scattered around the space.

This eccentric space was the set up for the concert. Hex 1 by Anna Meredith was the opener and a way to fill in the rest of the hour before the main Messiaen. Meredith wears many musical hats, I recall her score from A24’s Tuesday, a poor film, her offering the best thing about it. Written for violin and cello, there is an almost folk horror aura to its few minutes. Not as compelling as expected, though in the surroundings added atmospheres. The interplay between both insutments saw discordance and ethereal patterns. I’d like to listen agian.

Violinist Roger Hickle introduced both works, before the Quartet for the End of Time, he noted that the first players of this piece (Messiaen and other musicians in a POW camp in Poland), never played the work together again after its premier. The intense difficulty comes from its unabashed intensity, Catholic dogma melds with birdsong, in a work of hope and grace. Messiaen’s melody making is always evident, never going full hog into Avant-Garde trends. Any performance should move and thankfully this did here.

Hickle had the soaring finale solo, loving tributes to Jesus. On cello, Harriet Wiltshire tackled the famous solo also a dedication to Christ, though some grimaces proved how much hard work this can be. Done to emotional effect, it played off, Wiltshire played throughout with abandon. David Pagett on clarinet also had one of these many solos now with his very own movement all to himself. The avian friends clamour about, drone like ringing and affirmed, stomping bars to wrap up are all highlights. He played with serious determination and the silence after was also telling. Paul Israel who took on the role Messiaen did at the first concert, had the scuttling, proud, rhythmic bouts that demand the role. Israel followed with the others and for his own bursts fended finely through this chamber masterpiece. 

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