Septet – In the Light of Ravel

CD5050-39 Marcos Fregnani-Martins (flute), Jean-Marc Fessard (clarinet), Daniel Rubenstein (violin), Laurent Houque (violin), Raphaël Aubry (viola), Hélène Dautry (cello), Rachel Talitman (harp)

This CD (2017) features recordings of four pieces composed for the same combination of instruments as  Ravel’s famous Introduction and Allegro, among them a second recording of John Metcalf’s Septet.

The earlier recording can be found on the 2010 CD Paths of Song (Signum Records, SIGCD203).

https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8256480–in-the-light-of-ravel

My ‘Septet’ was written in response to a commission from Antony Griew for a work in honour of his parents. There was no specific brief, though I did talk with Antony about the family and the characteristics of his parents. He mentioned that he was fond of the flute; so it was decided that this instrument would be included, and shortly after, we agreed on the same ensemble as the famous Introduction and Allegro by Ravel.

Because I didn’t know David and Ann Griew personally, I decided that the best approach would be that the piece should honour parents in general, and I opted for a musical structure that would reflect this. A series of diatonic chords characterised by a consistent stepwise descending movement are common to the work as a whole. They are, as it were, the DNA of the piece, and the variations that derive from them display the family likenesses. The chords ‘live on’ through the Largamente. The chord sequence from which they are derived is heard at the very beginning and ending of the piece. Much of the other music around the central Calmo is lively and very rhythmic and the harp part is virtuosic. Many pieces of music have ‘hidden’ mottos built around letters and initials. The opportunity to ‘encrypt’ the initials of his Antony, his wife Dot and parents David and Ann Griew – an AG/DG motif in musical terms – seemed too good to miss. This tribute and simultaneous thanks to the commissioner can be heard at the end of the Largo movement. After a loud climax the music dies away to a series of quiet chords very high up on the string instruments. Immediately after, the motif can be heard on solo violin answered by the flute.