St. Barrahane's Church Festival of Music and Concerts

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St. Barrahane's Church of Ireland

Castletownshend

(8km from Skibbereen)

Co. Cork, P81 AH51

Ireland

concerts@barrahanemusic.ie

+353 86 226 4797 (Jacqueline Weij)

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The Contempo in Barrahane

April 4, 2025

8:00 pm

   

Organised in collaboration with the National String Quartet Foundation
The concert is supported by the Arts Council, Cork County Council and RTE Lyric FM

Venue: St. Barrahane's Church, Castletowshend, P81 AH51

Tickets €20
Online (booking fee applies), at the door, at Thornhill Electrical Skibbereen or text/call 086 226 4797

BOOK ONLINE

CONTEMPO QUARTET

Bogdan Sofei - violin, Ingrid Nicola - violin, Andreea Banciu - viola, Adrian Mantu - cello

Ireland’s longest established string quartet, the ConTempo Quartet was founded in Bucharest in 1995 and has been based in Ireland since 2003 as Galway Music Residency’s Ensemble in Residence. They were also RTE’s Resident Quartet from 2014 until 2019 and have performed nearly 2000 concerts in 46 countries. Praised as a ‘fabulous foursome’ (Irish Independent) and noted for performances which are ‘exceptional’ (The Strad) and ‘full of imaginative daring’ (The Irish Times), the ConTempo Quartet has forged a unique place in Irish musical life.

Programme
Mozart -
String Quartet in D minor K.421 [1783]
Rhona Clarke -
Pas de Quatre [2009 rev 2023]
Beethoven - String Quartet in E minor Op.59 No.2 Rasoumovsky [1806]

Mozart’s D minor quartet K.421 is the second in the set of six quartets that Mozart dedicated to Haydn, famously describing them as his children and as ‘the fruit of long and laborious efforts’. It is the only one of the set in a minor key and the prevailing mood of intense darkness sets in memorable relief those precious moments where the music moves into a major key and the clouds lift.
Rhona Clarke’s ‘Pas de Quatre’ was written for the ConTempo Quartet in 2009. The title (A Dance for Four) is inspired by the movement between the players as they direct and interact with each other.
Beethoven wrote his set of three Rasoumovsky Quartets in 1806, commissioned by the Russian Ambassador in Vienna, Count Andrey Rasoumovsky. The famously edgy and brittle first movement gives way to one of Beethoven’s most gorgeous creations, the slow second movement which he marked ‘to be played with deep feeling’. The intricate Scherzo is followed by a wild and spectacularly virtuosic finale.