Picture
NZSQ standing, with cello platform.
I just got back to Toronto from the Festival of the Sound, in Parry Sound, Ontario. There, I heard three fine string groups: the Lafayette, Penderecki and New Zealand quartets.

The New Zealand String Quartet has a unique appearance on stage: the three upper strings stand, and the cellist, Rolf Gjelsten, sits in a chair on a small platform. (You can see it in the photo above.) It’s a portable, folding contraption that looks a like a small parade float, and its purpose is to bring the cellist to eye-level with the other three players.


Okay – but why are the others standing, rather than sitting, in the first place? Violist Gillian Ansell told me that the greater freedom of movement that standing allows them – being able to move their whole bodies, rather than just moving from the waist up – leads to a more “dynamic” performance.

I heard the New Zealanders play a couple of Beethoven quartets – very refined performances, to be sure, but I must confess that it wasn’t apparent to me that standing (and the platform) made any difference to anything. However, when they turned to Shostakovich’s Quartet No. 9, it all suddenly made sense: the New Zealanders played with an intensity that left me feeling nailed to the back wall of the hall.

If standing helped them achieve this, then I’m all for it.

A little Googling revealed an article on standing string quartets that originally appeared in Strings magazine in 2007. (You can read it here.) The article mentions the Emerson Quartet and a few others, but not the New Zealanders. Yet according to Gjelsten, it was the NZSQ that first gave the idea to the Emersons.


© Colin Eatock 2011
 


Comments

08/08/2011 22:34

Have a look at this story http://www.nzsq.co.nz/news-reviews/features/why-does-the-quartet-play-standing-up/

Reply



Leave a Reply

    Eatock Daily

    I'm a composer and writer based in Toronto and this is my classical music blog, Eatock Daily.

    Here you'll find musings and meditations, some reviews and the occasional rant – as well as some of my articles from Toronto’s Globe and Mail newspaper, the Houston Chronicle and other publications.

    Those readers who are Canadian by persuasion may notice the little joke in the name “Eatock Daily.” Readers from other countries need not be concerned about it.

    And please do not take the word “daily” too literally.

    – CE

    Archives

    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011

    Index

    Click here for an alphabetical list of all blog entries.

    Blog Counter

    This blog counter for Eatock Daily was started on January 1, 2012. It shows all visits to this page in the year (so far).
    free counters
    Follow colineatock on Twitter