Engegård Quartet at Hellens, Much Marcle

Saturday 20 September 2025 19:30

This event is not bookable online. Please call the box office on 01432 340555 or pop into the foyer to book in person.

Tickets from: £0.00 to £20.00

Event Information

Arvid Engegård (violin), Amanda Håøy Horn (violin),
Juliet Jopling (viola), Jan Clemens Carlsen (cello)

Boyce (arr Derek Smith) String Quartet arrangement of Symphony No 2
Grieg String Quartet No 1 in G minor Op 27
Beethoven String Quartet in E flat major Op 127
The Engegård Quartet of Norway have already made a huge impact in Herefordshire: in back-to-back concerts in Autumn 2023 at Hellens and the Lion Ballroom, Leominster and, earlier this year, at Hay-on-Wye. Formed under the midnight sun in Lofoten in 2005, and now one of Scandinavia’s most sought-after classical ensembles, they have received true international acclaim through their performances at many of Europe’s finest venues and also through their discography. The Engegård are equally at home with the core repertoire and the lesser-known music of their homeland. They have played with some world-famous musicians, including Sir Andras Schiff, Leif Ove Andsnes and Kim Kashkashian.
An arrangement of a very short Boyce Symphony opens the concert: this is music of freshness, fluidity and lively rhythms.
Grieg’s G minor String Quartet which follows is his only complete work in this genre to have survived (he left one unfinished and a third one is lost). It is unmistakably Nordic and bears many of the characteristics of Grieg’s genius: songful lyricism, colour, atmosphere, dance-like elements … The work has drama, a certain grandeur, rich sonorities, shimmering writing and much more. Understandably, it is regarded as one of the outstanding string quartets of the late 19th century.
Beethoven’s Op 127 is the first of the composer’s five late string quartets which, by any standard, are among the pinnacles of achievement in Western classical music. In it, the material is reduced to its bare minimum, heightening its impact; a new harmonic language emerges; moments of silence create extraordinary tension; and there are passages of transcendent beauty, especially in the slow movement.
Tickets £20 (students in full-time education free)

The Engegård Quartet will be performing the same programme at the Lion Ballroom, Leominster on the following afternoon at 3pm. Tickets from the Courtyard.