Béla Bartók: The 6 String Quartets - Takács Quartet

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com's Best of 1998
If chamber music suggests merely sedate and timid pleasures, let the Takács Quartet guide you through the profound experience that this medium can convey--above all in the hands of a composer as rich in imagination and innovative in temperament as Béla Bartók. In some ways his cycle of string quartets traces not only his personal creative evolution but the deeply tragic zeitgeist of half a century as well. The Takács Quartet plays with an unfaltering sense for the lifeblood of this music in performances that are both gutsy and ethereal. --Thomas May

Amazon.com essential recording
Béla Bartók has emerged as one of the few modern masters who continue to be regularly performed and recorded. The six string quartets that span his career from 1908 to 1939 are generally regarded as this century's unsurpassed addition to the medium, and they provide an intimate entrée into the world of their withdrawn and enigmatic composer. With this cycle, the Takács Quartet confirms its reputation, against some very fierce competition, as possibly the most cogent,... read more

Béla Bartók: The 6 String Quartets - Takács Quartet

Béla Bartók: The 6 String Quartets - Takács Quartet, Music, Bela Bartok, Edward Dusinberre, Andras Fejer, Karoly Schranz, Roger Tapping, Takács Quartet, Chamber, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Quartet for Four String Instruments
Béla Bartók: The 6 String Quartets - Takács Quartet
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • go for Tokyo
  • Spectacular
  • Lacklustre insight ... airbrushed production.
  • The third way.
  • Finally, they get it
Béla Bartók: The 6 String Quartets - Takács Quartet
Edward Dusinberre , Andras Fejer , Karoly Schranz , Roger Tapping , and Takács Quartet
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

QuartetsQuartets | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Bartók, Béla | ( B ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
The Decca Records StoreThe Decca Records Store | Specialty Stores | Music
Similar Items:
  1. Beethoven: String Quartets
  2. Beethoven: The Late String Quartets
  3. Beethoven: String Quartets Op. 18
  4. Bartok: Complete Solo Piano Music
  5. Shostakovich: The String Quartets

ASIN: B0000042GU
Release Date: 1998-01-13

Tracks:

  1. String Quartet No. 1, op. 7 (Sz 40): I. Lento
  2. String Quartet No. 1, op. 7 (Sz 40): II. Poco a poco accelerando all'allegretto
  3. String Quartet No. 1, op. 7 (Sz 40): III. Introduzione Allegro - Allegro vivace
  4. String Quartet No. 3(Sz 85): I. Prima parte: Moderato
  5. String Quartet No. 3(Sz 85): II. Seconda Parte: Allegro
  6. String Quartet No. 3(Sz 85): III. Ricapitulazione della prima parte: Moderato - Coda: Allegro molto
  7. String Quartet No. 5 (Sz 85): I. Allegro
  8. String Quartet No. 5 (Sz 85): II. Adagio molto
  9. String Quartet No. 5 (Sz 85): III. Scherzo. Alla bulgarese -- Trio
  10. String Quartet No. 5 (Sz 85): IV. Andante
  11. String Quartet No. 5 (Sz 85): V. Finale: Allegro vivace -- Presto

Tracks:

  1. String Quartet No. 2, op. 17 (Sz 67): I. Moderato
  2. String Quartet No. 2, op. 17 (Sz 67): II. Allegro molto capriccioso
  3. String Quartet No. 2, op. 17 (Sz 67): III. Lento
  4. String Quartet No. 4, (Sz 91): I. Allegro
  5. String Quartet No. 4, (Sz 91): II. Prestissimo, con sordino
  6. String Quartet No. 4, (Sz 91): III. Non troppo lento
  7. String Quartet No. 4, (Sz 91): IV. Allegretto pizzicato
  8. String Quartet No. 4, (Sz 91): V. Allegro molto
  9. String Quartet No. 6 (Sz 114): I. Mesto - Piso, pesante - Vivace
  10. String Quartet No. 6 (Sz 114): II. Mesto - Marcia
  11. String Quartet No. 6 (Sz 114): III. Mesto - Burletta: Moderato
  12. IV. Mesto

Amazon.com's Best of 1998

If chamber music suggests merely sedate and timid pleasures, let the Takács Quartet guide you through the profound experience that this medium can convey--above all in the hands of a composer as rich in imagination and innovative in temperament as Béla Bartók. In some ways his cycle of string quartets traces not only his personal creative evolution but the deeply tragic zeitgeist of half a century as well. The Takács Quartet plays with an unfaltering sense for the lifeblood of this music in performances that are both gutsy and ethereal. --Thomas May

Amazon.com essential recording

Béla Bartók has emerged as one of the few modern masters who continue to be regularly performed and recorded. The six string quartets that span his career from 1908 to 1939 are generally regarded as this century's unsurpassed addition to the medium, and they provide an intimate entrée into the world of their withdrawn and enigmatic composer. With this cycle, the Takács Quartet confirms its reputation, against some very fierce competition, as possibly the most cogent, exciting exponent of this music today. They achieve an unusually successful synthesis of the quartets' polarizing components: lyrically haunting "night music," passages of grotesquely ironic humor, and, in the Sixth Quartet, an unrelentingly pervasive sense of desolation and farewell. In the process, the Takács players give visceral life to the extremities of technique Bartók's scores demand. These range from exaggerated glissandi to pizzicati made to snap violently against the fingerboard, at times producing a sound more akin to a percussion battery than a string quartet. The ensemble convincingly traverses Bartók's creative evolution, from the hothouse romanticism of the First Quartet to the Third's densely packed modernist fury and the palindrome structures of the Fourth and Fifth Quartets. Richly nuanced with local color, these accounts are among the best available on disc and will likely become standard-setters. --Thomas May

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars go for Tokyo.......2006-08-28

Bartok is not a likely candidate for frequent recordings in the 21st century. Before it is too late you should acquire the Tokyo version on RCA (including the Janacek quartets). Besides being a bargain (2 composers for the price of 1), you get passionate playing and sound that is excellent. Do not be swayed by anyone who says Decca (inventor of the "tree" after all) knows how to record anything. It does depend on your speakers (headphones). I have owned systems on which the Tokyo String Quartet did not sound good. Well, this is about the Takacs. They are relatively bloodless (do any of you really hear passion in this recording?). There are many who would say that that's the way Bartok should sound. But the Tokyo is like Heffler and Mikrokosmos--he sounds much better than Ranki whether or not he's authentic.

5 out of 5 stars Spectacular.......2006-01-31

I bought this CD in preparation for the Takacs Quartet's performance of the Bartok cycle in January of 2005. This recording is absolutely amazing, and it brings out the liveliness and the joy that the members of the Quartet take in playing this piece. Now, make sure you get the chance to see this group live; you will be amazed and astounded by their cohesiveness and energy.

2 out of 5 stars Lacklustre insight ... airbrushed production. .......2005-11-01

A medium to large hall ambience smooths & smudges it all. An inappropriate production decision for these quartets.
The playing lacks the emotional concentration & forensic insight needed - they have their moments but overall it just doesn't involve you like it should. The overall effect is of an airbrushed quality - the result is lacklustre.
I grew up on the landmark 1960's Juilliard readings, so you may know where I'm coming from, and what I expect to hear. It so happens that is what works best for this music, which is why those are legendary performance recordings.
After that these fall very far short. As Sony are still not re-releasing those classics, buy the Emerson Qt. recordings instead - they are of a similar quality to - and in the spirit of - the Juilliard's reading.

4 out of 5 stars The third way........2005-10-04

I've recently bought this cycle, after having or listening those by Tokyo String Quartet (DG & RCA), Hagen Quartett (DG), Alban Berg Quartett (EMI), Vegh Qt (Auvidis) and some other versions played by outstanding quartets, like the glorius Arditti Quartet's recording of the Fourth Quartet in Grammavision label.

If I'm thinking about a third way is because Takács shows a middle interpretation between the very hungarian performings of the Vegh Qt and the very "international" or "western" playing of the Tokyo Qt, ABQ or Hagen Qt versions. The Takács Quartet that play in this CD box is formed by musicians from the western tradition and hungarian born players, 50%; something you can feel in their interpretation, which is a bit more objective than Takács' first recording released by Hungaroton, with more hungarian players in the quartet, but still with the taste of the hungarian Bartók tradition, much more close to the popular and folk reminiscences of his music.

I don't hear in this performings the amazing precision of the Tokyo String Quartet in every pizzicatti, glissandi, or technical resource of the works; but, on the other hand, I can say that the musicality and folk sense of some parts it's better done in this Decca recording, which looks much more to the origin of some chords in the folk hungarian music which Bartók so deep has studied. Takács (Decca) bring a more aggressive version, something that makes very complex to have the precision of the more refine and "distant" Tokyo performings. Anyway, technically it's marvellous too, and that's the reason why I give them 4 stars... 5 stars only in heaven...

The conclusion is we are listening a very good performances of the cycle, in style and technique, one of the key works in this genre along the XXth Century; probably between the better.

5 out of 5 stars Finally, they get it.......2005-08-31

Bartok has been called many things, but one thing I wish he would be called more often is a mystic of music. In my over-educated opinion, that is what he was, and that dominated him as a composer, a pianist, an ethnomusicologist and a pedagogue. The problem is that many performers come to this music very naive or, worse, dismissive of this quality of Bartok's genius, and focus too heavily on technical apsects. The result is obvious: a failure to give a proper and authentic voice to the music.

I am sympathetic to the dilemma of any performer tackling these quartets - these are very demanding on a technical level alone. But this does not mean their beauty resides purely in that facet, nor does it excuse any performer for rendering these as a technical or academic exercise. Suffice to say, some performers just don't "get it," and thus ought not attempt these works, if they are not able to met the technical challenge they present and then transcend it in spirit to articulate their fuller beauty.

As a musician who's studied Bartok academically, I am very aware on an intellectual level of how these works relate to Bartok's studies in folk music, and I can easily pick out and analyze his inversions and sequences of folk motifs that populate these works. However, all too often this is something not easily *heard* by the average listener - a tragic irony, seeing much of Bartok's work is so rooted in folk music, which is possibly the most accessible of music idioms. Sadly, this is a mystic's lot: they experience something that is univerally accessible, yet in the process of articulating that experience, those first recieving the message miss the point, get destracted by superficial details, and obscure the beauty and truth of the mystic's message for everyone else. Luckily, music can speak for itself - if the performer doesn't get in the way. So if the performer understands, either consciously or intuitively, that there is a *heart* to these works beyond what he sees written so precisely and techinically on the page (i.e. "gets it"), and strives to articulate this, then that engimatic mysicism of Bartok is unlocked and becomes readily accessible to anyone willing to peer into it.

Fortunately and thankfully, the Takacs Quartet "get it." This is very likely the finest performance of these quartets ever recorded. Without repeating too much of what other reviewers have already said, there is a very genuine spirit and superior command to the Takacs Quartet's performance that makes the very challenging and highly technical quality of these quartets transparent so to reveal, rather than obscure, Bartok's vision. They open up Bartok's quartets in a rare way that allow the listener to "live" inside them, and glaze readily upon their beauty, possibly very closely to how Bartok originally envisioned it. I listened to this recording immediately after listening the 1960's recording by the Novak Quartet, and the difference was astounding. It only vindicated my long standing opinion that Bartok was indeed a mystic of music, and that his unique and very challenging compositions offer much, much more (and for a wider audience) than one might assume from a less inspired performance.

Absolutey, unequivocally recommended.

Music Review:

  1. Bach: Cantatas BWV 82 and 199
  2. Bach: Suites for Solo Cello
  3. Bach - The Keyboard Concertos Vol 2
  4. Bach Unaccompanied Cello Suites: Performed on Double Bass
  5. Bartok: Viola Concertos
  6. Beethoven: Concerto for violin in D
  7. Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 3 & 9; Overtures
  8. Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 4 & 6 "Pastorale"
  9. Beethoven Violin Concerto in D/Mendelssohn Violin Concerto in E Minor
  10. Between the Barres 20th Anniversary Edition

Music Review

music review

Music Review

Mustache Ride

The Masterpiece Collection: Strauss

The Origin of Sound

One by One

The Single Collection

The Seven Letters From Tibet

Tom Et Kassaitou a La Ferme [Import]

The Best Of Kris Kross Remixed '92... [EP]

Tempest

Talkology: The Lost Press Conferences 1966 Japan, Vol. 3 [Import] [CD-single]

Smoke Rings: 1932

Tributo A Los Grandes: Cadetes Corridos

The Skills Dat Pay Da Bills

From Glen to Glen

Redbird