Peter Child: Reviews: String Quartet No. 2
Composed 1989. APNM.


Excerpt from

A sweet quartet from Child celebrates baby


The Boston Globe, Tuesday, Devember 19, 1989

By Richard Dyer

When Andrew Ernst Gombosi was born on March 7, 1987, his parents, Peter and Carolyn, decided to do something special to commemorate this special occasion: they commissioned a string quartet from composer Peter Child. It was a nice idea and Child has produced a nice quartet, as sweet, obstreperous and surprising as any proper baby ought to be.

The work, "Andrew's Quartet," had its premiere Sunday night at a special benefit concert by the Lydian String Quartet at the All-Newton Music School. A fanfare celebrates Andrew and introduces his piece; the first movement includes a deliciously off-center waltz. The canonic slow movement is derived from a lullabye; a fast and playful contrasting section at its center uses the same material. The third movement was a little harder to grasp on first hearing -- it seemed a little short-winded and everytime it got something going it stopped and did something else. Perhaps this was the point, and repeated listening would probably make sense of it -- one has learned to trust Peter Child. The composer's program note also points out that the third movement also contains a reference to the Gombosi "family whistle." The performance was skillful, devoted and entertaining, and this was obviously an Occasion; the audience entered into the spirit of things and repeatedly recalled the Lydian Quartet to mthe stage and the players, in turn, repeatedly beckoned Child to rise from his chair.