Composed by Max Reger
with Bela Szedlak
2. String Quartet in G minor, Op. 54/1
Composed by Max Reger
3. String Quartet in A major, Op. 54/2
Composed by Max Reger
4. String Quartet in D minor, Op. 74
Composed by Max Reger
5. String Quartet in E flat major, Op. 109
Composed by Max Reger
6. String Quartet in F sharp minor, Op. 121
Composed by Max Reger
Reger: Complete String Quartets,Max Reger,Bern String Quartet,Cpo Records,Chamber,Chamber Music & Recitals,Classical,Classical Composers,Quartet for Four String Instruments
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Reger: Complete String Quartets
Max Reger , and Bern String Quartet Manufacturer: Cpo Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001RSY Release Date: 1995-11-14 |
Tracks:
- Quartet In D Minor (1888-89): Allegro energico
- Quartet In D Minor (1888-89): Adagio
- Quartet In D Minor (1888-89): Finale 'Aufschwung'
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 1 In G Minor: Allegro agitato
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 1 In G Minor: Vivace assai
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 1 In G Minor: Largo mesto
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 1 In G Minor: Prestissimo assai
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 2 In A Major: Allegro assai e bizarro
- Quartet Op. 54 No. 2 In A Major: Andante semplice con Variazioni
- Allegro vivace con spirito
Tracks:
- Quartet Op. 74 In D Minor: Allegro agitato e vivace
- Quartet Op. 74 In D Minor: Vivace
- Quartet Op. 74 In D Minor: Andante sostenuto con Variazioni
- Quartet Op. 74 In D Minor: Allegro con spirito e vivace
Tracks:
- Quartet Op. 109 In E Flat Major: Allegro moderato
- Quartet Op. 109 In E Flat Major: Quasi presto
- Quartet Op. 109 In E Flat Major: Larghetto
- Quartet Op. 109 In E Flat Major: Allegro con grazia
- Quartet Op. 121 In F Sharp Minor: Allegro espressivo
- Quartet Op. 121 In F Sharp Minor: Vivace
- Quartet Op. 121 In F Sharp Minor: Adagio
- Quartet Op. 121 In F Sharp Minor: Allegro con spirito
Customer Reviews:
Fundamental chamber works!.......2005-08-07
Reger adopted undeniable influences of Bach inn his piano and organ compositions, but looked through Beethoven and Brahms in his extended chamber works.
His Quartet in D minor without specific Opus (1888) reveals as any other else, his profound admiration by L.v.B. It is a cohesive piece although Max is still far from domain this genre.
His Quartet Op. 54 No. 1 is signed by Johannes Brahms with the exception of the Largo mesto.
The Quartet Op. 54 No. 2 seems to affiance his musical style. Expansive and serene with enrapturing melodic flights.
His Quartet Op 74 is his longest one, composed in the eve of the Century may be considered as music in its purest sense. Reger puts out flashes of a new language, signed by dark poetry -Böcklin- and elusive abstraction, he returns to Beethoven (specially in the third movement) though the last movement is pregnant of humor.
His Op. 109 is a contemplative cosmic gaze not mystical, enrooted deeply in the intersection's point between the tradition and the innovation. If you listen carefully the first movement you will find suggested traces of the Dies Irae in certain passages.
His last Quartet Op. 12 clearly preannounce in the intimate voices of Schoenberg's Transfigured Night. It' s undeniable his most complex, dense, ambitious and leafy qprk within this genre.
His musical thinking is built on the counterpoint's basis and traditional forms. His harmonies seem an opaline crystal without definite color. Reger begins with a certain tonality and comes to it, walking up and down through countless harmonic lateral paths.
The Bern ensemble has been one of best findings in the last two decades. If you think in the raising quartets such Chiringilian, Talich and Berne you may remain calm.
AN UNPARALLED REGER BARGAIN .......2001-08-18
Frankly, I doubt he's had a very strong hold on anybody's imagination for very long: He can appear ornery, thorny, brutish, thick, inaccessible. And, indeed, not only in appearance; however, as in some of his marvelously autobiographical piano music (e.g. "From My Diary," Op. 82), chamber (e.g. Clarinet Quintet, Op. 146) and symphonic works (e.g. Suite In the Olden Style, Op. 93 or the Romantic Suite, Op. 125), we see an obviously vulnerable composer shedding and surrendering his "veneer" to become more approachable. But don't blink! He's just as apt to turn around and wall himself up.
In Reger's quartet output, the man displays all his sides, his weaknesses, his strengths. At times, he is downright lovable; at others, an irascible codger. But the journey through his quartets is worth the effort, regardless.
The early Quartet in D already portends "the Reger to come." Its opening Allegro Energico and quizzical Finale ("Aufschwung") have all the hallmarks of a quirky composer who knew who he was. [This sounds very much like another composer whose String Quartets, Op. 18 established a firm personna early on and rather turned the musical establishment on its ear. Now... what was his name... Ludwig van... something.]
Both Op. 54 (No.'s 1 and 2) seem to find a Reger more at ease, less tense, although there are moments (as in the opening Allegro Assai E Bizarro of Op. 54, No.2) where he fits and starts; but, then, the lovely Largo Mesto (Op. 54, No. 1) and Andante Semplice Con Variazoni (Op. 54, No. 2) complement nicely.
Op. 74 is a curious work longing for a place to stabilize, an interesting work caught on the horns of an on-going "agitato" and a partially sustained "andante." This manic/depressive nature, one that manifests itself in Reger's music, is a compelling facet.
With Op. 109, we come to a more brooding composer, deep in thought, dense in compositional style. Even here, the Larghetto brings no real relief. One of Reger's more "homogenous" works, it can become a tad daunting to sit through. Reger, never one to be a rampant melodist, seems to try his hardest here to keep all lyricism subservient to technique. And so, for me, this seems the weaker quartet for it.
The Op. 121 pulls out all the stops. We are in uncharted territory here. Reger teases us with an "expressive" opening Allegro that, well, really isn't, pokes at us with a Vivace that harbors a gallows humor, allows us brief solace with a most affecting Adagio and, then, concludes by rattling us with a death-defying Allegro Con Spirito of amazing proportions.
To say that Reger's quartets are complex would be putting it mildly. This is not the kind of chamber music one listens to for the sheer beauty of it. This is not Reger's style; actually, he eschews the outright display of obligatory lyricism. If one is to appreciate Reger's musical "world," and especially these quartets, patience and immersion are essential. After repeated hearings, the composer becomes "clear."
The Bern String Quartet are faithful (and intrepid) interpretative performers of Reger. They are one of the few groups I've ever heard who can bring the beauties of Reger to the fore and subvert the tedious to the listenable, hardly a task unworthy of kudos. The sound given the group is warm, but detailed, and aids in clarifying the Reger "thickness."
[Running time--- CD 1: 73:32 CD 2: 53:15 CD 3: 74:17]
I like all of Reger.......2000-03-22
Track Listings:
- Russian Gourmet
- Schubert: Symphonies No. 5 & 6
- Season Remembered
- Seasons Opus 67 / Valses
- Singer, Soldier, Lover, Priest: Renaissance Songs of Juan del Encina
- Sonatas for Flute & Pianoforte
- Songs Of Hector Berlioz
- Souvenirs of Scandinavia
- Spohr: Violin Concertos Nos. 2 & 5
- Stokowski Conducts Tchaikovsky
Track Listings
King of the Sax [Original recording remastered]
Sonatas for Violin, Cello & Piano
The Definitive Hoosier Hotshots Collection