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This year, the Takács Quartet celebrates its 50th anniversary with global tours, new commissions, and another opportunity to savour their artistry on disc. Their latest album — made in collaboration with a favourite partner, keyboard phenomenon Marc-André Hamelin — continues the ensemble’s commitment to expanding the chamber music repertoire by championing female composers.
Florence Price takes the spotlight in a pairing of her Piano Quintet in A minor (1936) with Antonín Dvořák’s ever-popular A major Piano Quintet. Price’s score was among a trove of manuscripts discovered in an Illinois attic in 2009, more than 50 years after her death. The quintet reveals her singular voice: lyrical, structurally inventive and deeply rooted in African American musical traditions.
Early in his American residency as director of New York’s National Conservatory — founded by the visionary philanthropist Jeannette Thurber — Dvořák championed the idea that Black spirituals and Indigenous music held the key to an authentically American musical identity. Price’s quintet now finds powerful new life alongside Dvořák’s chamber masterwork — two pieces linked by a shared faith in the richness of American musical voices.
Takács violist Richard O’Neill shared some thoughts on the album.
What are some of the unique challenges and rewards for a string quartet in playing Florence Price’s Piano Quintet?
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