30 years and still going musically strong
In an age when marriageâconsidered the most sacrosanct of all relationshipsâdoes not last for too many years, the Endellion String Quartet has lasted for over 30. David Waterman (cello), Andrew Watkin and Ralph DâSouza (violin) and Garfield Jackson (viola) comprise the worldâs leading string quartet and Mumbai had the pleasure of hearing them play early last week.
The Quartet has returned to India after a performance nearly 14 years ago, although individual members have returned from time to time to play at the Sangat festival in December. The band has another India connection in the Mumbai-born Ralph. âHeavyweightâ musicians indeed, the sense of irreverence on the part of the band members comes as a bit of a surprise.The jokes start early in our conversation. What can the audience expect to hear at the concert? âA band thatâs 15 years older,â says David Waterman, deadpan. On a more businesslike note, he outlines their programme â Schubert, Beethoven and Bartok among other pieces by other composers. Their Beethoven and Bartok cycles are what the Quartet has gained recognition for all over the globe. And we mean âglobeâ in quite the literal sense.
With concerts in all the major continents, including Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Australia, the band still manages to connect with all their audiences at a âvery intimate levelâ as their reviewers say. How is it possible to connect with diverse audiences at the same level? âWe make a connection through the music,â says David, âBecause the emotions it arouses are universal. All the fundamental emotions, whether love or terror or humour or depression â everyone feels them. Weâre just the vehicle that conveys the music. We try to be as communicative with it as we can.â David explains further: âSee, we donât play differently in different countries. Music has to speak to everyone. We might play differently depending on whether weâre playing in a very small hall or a very huge hall, because with time, you develop a sense of how your sound projects... you develop a sense of the space in which youâre playing. But apart from that, we play in the way that we think is truest to the music.â Another aspect of the bandâs playing that reviewers comment on is the rapport between the members, âthe sense of discoveryâ with which they play to each other. Keeping the freshness canât be an easy task considering Andrew, David, Garfield and Ralph have played together for three decades, but David makes it seem natural and a matter of course. âItâs the music again that does this and the nature of the pieces we play. Theyâre such great pieces that we have to keep exploring them. I think it (our playing) would become repetitive if we stopped rehearsing the pieces that we know. But we never do that. We carry on rehearsing. And we never perform a piece without doing a few good rehearsals on it. Itâs while we are rehearsing that we discover new things about it, which makes us feel a new way about it. So thatâs where the sense of discovery comes from,â he says.
As for the unusually long time the band has been together, David says, âWe travel together, we have our meals together. We have to come to an agreement about various business things and what pieces to play and those sorts of things. But there is no âleaderâ. We are all free to say what we want, try different things. Each one of us has a unique personality, and we have to accommodate and negotiate with each other. We have to learn to take criticism and give criticism, make suggestions and take suggestions and thatâs something you learn to do over time. And just like in a marriage, you either learn to overcome your problems or it just gets worse and worse.â
Another interesting aspect of the bandâs career is that theyâve been the resident quartet at both Cambridge University and MIT. What does that involve? âWell, it doesnât mean that we live there,â laughs David. âWhat it does mean is that we have a series of concerts in the universityâs concert hall. We coach the students, give lectures and demonstrations on the pieces we are playing, coordinate with course faculty. So that if theyâre teaching the students about Bartok, then thatâs what we play in our next few concerts. We have a very strong connection with the place...in fact, Cambridge is like our second home,â he says.
The Quartet seems to have pursued their music with a single-minded devotion, so much so that David professes not to know much about other genres at all. David admits, âGarfield and I like jazz, but as to the others...weâre just not very knowledgeable about other genres.â Well what music would he be likely to listen to if he was driving around in his car? âOh it wouldnât be music at allâIâd rather listen to a test match!â David interjects, adding after a pause, âIt would be a classical pieceâcertainly not another string musician or a cellistâbut a pianist.â
Humour aside, the music they play is deeply important to the Quartet and David says, âItâs a great privilege to be able to spend a lifetime doing something that you love which is something very few people get to do. Itâs hard work and itâs a hard life in some ways, but we wouldnât be doing anything else.â
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