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Purcell Quartet
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The
Purcell Quartet has probably the most stable membership of any chamber
music ensemble on the early music scene. Founded in 1983, it has
undergone just one change of membership since then, replacing Elizabeth
Wallfisch as second violin, with Catherine Weiss. Through nearly 30
recordings of a huge range of repertory, they have established
themselves as leaders in the area of baroque chamber music. Nor is their
repertory limited by size - in 1998 they staged an extensive tour of
Japan of Monteverdi’s last opera ‘L’Incoronazione
di Poppea’, and earlier had presented a critically-acclaimed
sell-out Bach weekend at the Wigmore Hall in London with two of the
Lutheran Masses, early cantatas and harpsichord concerti. Tess Knighton
wrote in the Times “The “minimalist” approach as adopted by the Purcell Quartet draws
the listener into the textual and musical rhetoric in an intimate and
immediate way, and with singers and players as excellent as these the
experience is utterly convincing.”
In such productions, they work with the very finest soloists:
Susan Gritton, Nancy Argenta, Catherine Bott, Emma Kirkby, Julia Gooding,
Michael Chance, Dominique Visse, Guy de Mey, Mark Padmore, Peter Harvey,
& Richard Wistreich are just some of the singers with whom they have
recently worked. During
their 25 years together, the group has toured the world, including the
USA, Chile, Bolivia, Colombia, Peru, Turkey and all the countries of
Europe. They have been regular visitors to Japan for over 10 years,
taking, in addition to 1998’s ‘Poppea’,
a ter-centenary production of ‘Dido
& Æneas’ with Nancy Argenta. At home in the United
Kingdom they have played for most of the major festivals, have recorded
extensively for the BBC, and toured several times with the Early Music
Network. In the Bach year 2000, they have presented several programmes
of his music, including two concerts of early cantatas at the
Spitalfields Festival, Lutheran Masses in Budapest, harpsichord concerti
in Salzburg and another sell-out concert at the Wigmore Hall of funeral
cantatas on the very anniversary day, 28th July 2000. After
a series of six recordings for Hyperion Records, they have recorded
exclusively for Chandos Records since 1987, having made thirty-six discs
with a huge range of music - Purcell, Corelli, Lawes, Bach, Handel,
Vivaldi, Weckmann, Leclair, Schütz, Buxtehude & Biber have all had
discs devoted to them. The critical response has been consistently
enthusiastic - JFA in the Gramophone wrote recently "I am drawn
to the sheer beauty and intimacy of the ensemble playing here...A strongly
recommended new release." One of their recent release features
music from the dynamic and brilliant world of seventeenth-century Italy
under title 'Capriccio Stravagante' and George Pratt writing in The BBC
Music Magazine (where it was "Pick of the Month) described it thus:
The playing is infectiously uninhibited and technically immaculate
- a programme of unqualified pleasure. Their most recent
release is of Early Cantatas by JSBach performed by some of today's
finest early music interpreters - Emma Kirkby, Michael Chance, Charles
Daniels, Peter Harvey and the Purcell Quartet. In October 2001, they took a fully staged production of Monteverdi’s Orfeo to Japan, with a cast of over forty people, and with Mark Padmore in the title role and other roles taken by Dominique Visse, Susan Bickley, Suzie le Blanc, Stephen Varcoe, Richard Wistreich and Julian Podger. The controversial production was set in the post-war Balkans and employed the entire cast as the indistinguishable members of village performing an annual ritual. It was a huge success and they are planning further performances around Europe in the coming years. They are also planning tours of Brazil, Saudi Arabia, Japan, France, Australia, Ireland and Germany in the coming years. Promoters please note: if you wish to include this biography in a concert programme etc, please contact M.A.M. Management to ensure that you receive the most up to date version. |
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