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              Purchase button  | Norman O’NEILL 
              (1875-1934) Chamber Works for Strings and PianoString Quartet in C major (c.1893-1909) [18:48]
 Piano Trio in One Movement, Op. 32 (1909) [8:53]
 Piano Quintet in E minor (1904) [28:38]
 Theme and Variations for Piano Trio on the popular song Polly 
              Oliver, Op. 1 (1895) [13:07]
 
  Michael Dussek (piano); The Bridge Quartet rec. 22-23 February 2012, Wyastone Concert Hall, Wyastone Leys, 
              Monmouth, Wales
 
  EM RECORDS EMR CD005 [69:26] | 
         
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 If Norman O’Neill is remembered for anything today it is as 
                  a member of the so-called Frankfurt Gang. During O’Neill’s formative 
                  years many music academies in Europe were highly regarded. Cyril 
                  Scott, Percy Grainger, Norman O’Neill and Balfour Gardiner arrived 
                  in Frankfurt to study at the Hochschule. Collectively this group 
                  became known as the Frankfurt Gang. O’Neill was to study there 
                  from 1893 to 1897.
 
 Born in 1875 in London, O’Neill at first studied with Sir Arthur 
                  Somervell who was a former composition pupil of Stanford. Appointed 
                  as music director at the Haymarket O’Neill spent the majority 
                  of his life working in the theatre and was a prolific composer 
                  of incidental music to plays. Today he is largely forgotten. 
                  Although I was aware of the scores for Maeterlinck’s The 
                  Blue Bird (1909) and Barrie’s Mary Rose (1920) 
                  before hearing this disc I hadn’t heard any of O’Neill’s music. 
                  These four chamber pieces appear here in world première recordings.
 
 It is not possible to exactly date the String Quartet in 
                  C major. We are informed in Michael Schofield’s booklet 
                  notes that in the Royal College of Music catalogue reference 
                  was found to a manuscript entitled ‘String Quartet by Norman 
                  O’Neill’. It appears to be an amalgam of three movements composed 
                  at different times. The only movement that was dated is the 
                  Scherzo from 1909. It is suggested that the other two 
                  were from a period much earlier than the Scherzo - 
                  before the Frankfurt period. The work’s undemanding writing 
                  is the essence of the so-called ‘English pastoral school’. It’s 
                  evocative of picturesque villages and rural landscapes and spins 
                  in a number of English folk-like melodies. I found the opening 
                  movement uplifting and highly appealing. There is a gentle almost 
                  heart-rending feel to the Poco Adagio and the folk-like 
                  lyrical finale is especially interesting for its choice of contrasting 
                  tempi.
 
 O’Neill completed his Piano Trio in One Movement, Op. 
                  32 in 1909 and dedicated it to Arthur Somervell. It seems to 
                  have been performed in Paris at the Salle Erard in 1910 with 
                  O’Neill’s wife Adine Ruckert at the piano. I would be surprised 
                  if it was not strongly influenced by the then popular Cobbett 
                  single movement Phantasy format. Like the String 
                  Quartet in C major there is nothing here that is dark or 
                  disturbing. It’s highly appealing and slightly pastoral in mood 
                  with distinct folk voices.
 
 It seems that the Kreiss Quartet with O’Neill’s wife Adine as 
                  pianist introduced the Piano Quintet in E minor in 
                  1904 at a London recital. In this four movement score O’Neill 
                  leaves the pastoral behind. I can certainly hear in its pages 
                  influential composers such as Brahms and Tchaikovsky. The opening 
                  feels urbane and highly confident. Emotionally charged content 
                  is subjected to contrasting moods yet nothing is pent-up, angry, 
                  unpredictable or disagreeable. The warm, summery and generally 
                  welcoming Scherzando contains episodes of a breezy 
                  and almost squally character. The genial and benign Romance 
                  just has to be music depicting a loving relationship. The welcoming 
                  and appealing Finale has an underlying percussive feel.
 
 The final item is the Opus 1 Theme and Variations for Piano 
                  Trio on the popular song ‘Polly Oliver’. He composed 
                  this single movement piece in 1895, the final year of his study 
                  in Frankfurt. Pretty Polly Oliver was a popular seventeenth 
                  century song. In it a love-struck maid decides to enlist as 
                  a soldier and follow her lover to the battlefield. For some 
                  reason the writing reminded me of a children’s nursery rhyme. 
                  It is possible to perceive a programme that follows the text 
                  of Pretty Polly Oliver yet the undemanding music is 
                  highly agreeable on its own.
 
 The engineers have done a marvellous job providing realistic 
                  sound quality and an impressive balance between piano and strings. 
                  The scrupulously prepared Bridge Quartet and pianist Michael 
                  Dussek are completely at home with O’Neill’s demands. I found 
                  their ensemble and highly agreeable string tone very pleasing. 
                  With an abundance of vitality and character the players serve 
                  as marvellous advocates for these rare and appealing chamber 
                  scores.
 
 Michael Cookson
 
 
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