Discoveries

Inside the Czech Quartet, 1928

In this project the Florian Ensemble attempted to understand an unfamiliar attitude to musical togetherness from the distant past. This blog is your in-depth guide to what we discovered!


In a process that would challenge the very foundations of our musical upbringing, we aimed to assimilate these musicians’ remarkable style of making music together. That sense of connection is our own passion, so trying to develop a ‘radically historical’ model of that sensation was an incredibly rewarding experience. The project required us to rethink all sorts of things, from our attitudes to notation, to instrumental technique, and ultimately to our ears and musical judgement(s).

If you listen to the example below, It immediately stands out that the Czech Quartet musicians did not experience ensemble in the same way that modern players (or listeners) do. But their playing is so beautifully crafted, so passionate, and so subtle, that it makes no sense to argue that modern styles of chamber music performance are ‘better’. They were simply working with radically different assumptions. So, our aim was to try and find out what made these players ‘tick’ when playing together, but not always ‘together’. What sorts of conventions, relationships, and priorities could give rise to music-making like this?

We worked in detail on just four movements: three by Antonin Dvořák and one by Joseph Suk (who was also the ensemble’s second violinist).

If you are interested to read more about the context for our work, you can access the full text of Chris’s PhD thesis here. As well as explaining these practical findings about one historical group, it looks at the philosophical and cultural implications of adopting such a different attitude to ensemble.

The blog itself will walk you through our discoveries, one by one. It’s recommended that you start from #1, as they build on each other in a way that shadows our gradually increasing understanding. The subtitle of each post will tell you which piece each is referring to, and the original recording and full score is always given at the top for help with orientation. Some posts will also include more detailed audio and score examples.

We hope you enjoy exploring this fascinating material with us!

  • Various musicians have experimented with the strikingly unfamiliar performance styles heard on early recordings. Sometimes this has been with the intention of making (almost) exact copies: Sigurd Slåttebrekk and Tony Harrison’s fascinating work from 2008 is a great example, which involved painstaking amounts of detailed listening, experimentation and technological wizardry. Our intention here was subtly different to theirs, partly for practical reasons, and partly for philosophical ones. We wanted to probe the dynamics of ensemble, and for this we felt that exact replication—typically involving lots of editing in post-production—would not be so interesting. We preferred a slightly looser process that acknowledged the vast distance between our musical upbringing on the one hand, and that of our historical subjects on the other.

    Our method was relatively simple, and was mainly grounded in a lot of listening. We tried hard not to get bogged down in labelling, or an approach that replaced the subtle dynamics of experience with a bunch of static ‘objects’ or ‘devices’ that were ‘applied’ to the scores. We discussed all sorts of things verbally, of course; but we were primarily interested in what it felt like to make music ‘together’ in this startlingly pre-modern way. This approach made it easier to grasp the subtleties of the Czech Quartet’s style—and to understand why capturing them was so difficult. Incidentally, it yielded ways of describing musical performance that are richly metaphorical, thus providing yet mroe evidence of music’s ‘lifelike’ qualities, and ability to model the dynamics of human experience.

    The insights set out below only scratch the surface of what we discovered in (only!) 12 hours of sessions. We had been familiar with these recordings for quite a few years, but made a conscious choice to confine this detailed archaeological process to a short, intense burst. Our efforts to embody this alien manner of playing meant we had to verbalise many things that normally go beneath the radar: aspects of performance that never usually need saying out loud because they are assimilated into the very foundations of a musician’s creative imagination. Sometimes the recorded results are quite rough, as you’ll hear. But it seemed much more interesting, in terms of finding things out, not to present a sanitized version, but actually to communicate the content of the process in all of its vulnerability.

    For all these reasons, the posts will often grapple with aspects of the performer’s experience that are not easily captured by the normal 'perspective' of discussions about classical music. Our disposition very rarely intersected with claims about the (alleged) characteristics of musical works. And we found that generalisations, abstractions, lists of ‘valid’ practices, or other black-and-white distinctions, were actively unhelpful. By grounding our approach in embodied experience, we were able to bypass some of those familiar contentions, and start to explore very different kinds of insight.

    The idea of going 'beyond abstraction' ultimately proved to be the crux of the whole project. It leads in some radical and rewarding directions, and many of these implications have yet to be explored. One of the most central is about the ideology of historicism in performance (usually referred to as 'HIP'). It is surely worth asking how far evidence of early recorded style, like that of the the Czech Quartet, has been treated in classical music’s court of opinion? Does that familiar historical-ethical grounding for critical response even have a coherent basis, given that this kind of evidence has been so roundly ignored?

    In the face of all sorts of competing claims for the territory of ‘how nineteenth century music ought to go’, then, we have taken a very different route. We do not propose that this research should lead anybody to police performance on the basis of the evidence. What we discovered here suggests something broader and more interesting: that almost every layer of classical music culture incentivises an attitude that, when one looks more closely, is essentially upside-down. The verbal trappings of classical culture persuade us to start ‘looking at’ music from the wrong end of the telescope, because it believes that the abstract ‘work’ is more real, more solid, more reliable, than musical experience. This makes sense up to a point. But if you look at it in enough detail it starts to fall apart.

    Historical evidence does not need to be a stick with which to beat performers. It can act as a stimulus not just to recovery of some sanctified, imaginary, 'original', but towards entirely different ways of thinking about music. Our project aimed to undermine the disembodied, abstract disposition towards musical objects that has been conventional since the 1800s. In the process, we hope to show how nonsensical it is to pose (and enforce) limits to creativity on that basis. Making these detailed insights available is a way of raising awareness of just how wide the possibilities are. Armed with that realisation, it is much easier to recognise the ideological limits that are both a brake on, and a misunderstanding of, the contribution that performers make to the meaning of music.

Original Czech Quartet recordings

Florian Experiments

Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#36: Weave (I)

From this point the idea of ‘weaving’ became especially useful for appreciating how gestures could be passed and interrelated, but in a way that operated independently of any enforced ‘interpretive’ similarity. (We were also increasingly aware of the integrated quality of recurring metaphors: we barely spoke of ‘just’ timing, but more often of holding, announcing, spinning, weeping, or rolling (see Leech-Wilkinson and Prior 2014)). Like most of our verbal explanations, this concept eschewed decision-making...

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#35: Not talking was effective problem-solving

In briefly revisiting the Meditation, we had considerably more success in approximating the quality of the Czech Quartet’s ‘asynchrony’, but this improvement, importantly, was not remotely a product of more detailed verbal discussion. Returning to this piece after the Vivace of Op.96 had heightened our sensitivity to their different modes of interaction, and this example felt radically different from the ‘playful’ untogetherness of the inner parts in #31, #32 and #33…

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#34: Fuller tone increases physicality of intervals

Adopting a fuller, more highly ‘spun’ sound helped us to increase the density of ‘content’ we were able to find within melodic intervals: a greater range of overtones opened up a richer range of consonants and vowels in the grammar of the music. This is related to the idea of balancing up, insofar as we tried to retain some of this feeling even when becoming less present, individually, within the texture…

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#33: Character of ‘asynchrony’

A further implication of #32 is that a string player’s timing variation is always integrated with precisely how the bow is ‘allowed’ to behave. For instance, the unevenness generated by using an intrinsically unstable region of the bow, which then has to be controlled, has very little in common with ‘uneven’ playing that involves different kinds of stroke. In this case, the expressive energy of the unevenness seemed to have very little to do with cerebral ‘intention’: it was almost literally ‘playing out’ on the turf of physicality.

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#32: Bowing, unevenness, and ensemble

The inner parts are not consistently synchronised in the opening paragraph of this movement, despite what looks like an obvious ‘binding’ in the notation. One should see this in the context of their embracing physical instability in the bow (#31), which may have been a strategy for creating extra energy: it gives the impression of acceleration, but without actually getting faster. In terms of ensemble, it is also significant that the two players perform this stroke in exactly the same way, but not always at the same time. In this kind of ‘togetherness’, then, the players’ creative impulses are operating intensely collectively – to the extent that the two are almost ‘fused’ in their manner – and yet this could always be quite independent, in principle, from strict ‘between-player synchronisation’.

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#31: Middle voice bowstrokes

At the opening of the Op.96 Finale (b.1-32) the middle parts play the energetic, locomotive-like figure in what is by modern standards a subtly unusual way. They did not seem remotely concerned with what we called ‘orchestral’ priorities, in that they did not aim for any ‘sheen’ in the sound, and seemed actively resistant to generating ‘solidity’ in their timing. (By contrast, our impression of the usual process of setting out on such a ‘finale texture’ was that it could resemble ‘starting up the orchestral resonating machine’). Instead, the physicality of their bowing here felt to us to be consciously designed to work against discipline, rather than to enable more control. Could they have set themselves a challenge by making the bowstroke more difficult to accomplish than was strictly necessary?

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#30: Local shaping and ‘groove’ in accompaniment

We were quickly able to isolate some details in the Czech Quartet’s treatment of the Lento’s repertoire of ‘accompanying’ figures. The viola player in particular seemed inclined to increase in speed in the first half of a bar, and to ‘recover’ that time in the second half; indeed this was one of the things which we had found destabilising in #28. We also found that this give-and-take motion was is never only a matter of speed, but is entwined with change in the physicality of the tone: from an initial sense of containment (i.e. tension), into a more ‘released’ sound later in the bar or phrase….

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Chris Terepin Chris Terepin

#29: Introduction to accompaniment

This movement demanded close attention to the basic idea of ‘accompanying’, and to nuances within its amalgamation of social and musical functions. One might take the view that a subsidiary role – designated on the basis of the material ‘itself’ – equates to a responsibility to lay down a disciplined, organised, even ‘structural’ canvas on which melodic fantasy can unfold with freedom. But this is not necessarily inconsistent with the idea that these voices can take a great deal of control of the music in a less overt manner, by shaping the underlying landscape on which the ‘foreground action’ unfolds…

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