Composed by Willem Pijper
with Henk Guittart , Viola de Hoog , Wim De Jong , Janneke van der Meer , Schoenberg Quartett
2. String Quartet No 2
Composed by Willem Pijper
with Henk Guittart , Viola de Hoog , Wim De Jong , Janneke van der Meer , Schoenberg Quartett
3. String Quartet No 3
Composed by Willem Pijper
with Henk Guittart , Viola de Hoog , Wim De Jong , Janneke van der Meer , Schoenberg Quartett
4. String Quartet No 4
Composed by Willem Pijper
with Henk Guittart , Viola de Hoog , Wim De Jong , Janneke van der Meer , Schoenberg Quartett
5. String Quartet No 5
Composed by Willem Pijper
with Henk Guittart , Viola de Hoog , Wim De Jong , Janneke van der Meer , Schoenberg Quartett
5 String Quartets,Pijper,Schoenberg Quartet,Olympia,Chamber Music & Recitals,Classical
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Beethoven - The Complete String Quartets / Alban Berg Quartet
Ludwig van Beethoven , Alban Berg Quartet , and Gerhard Schulz, Hatto Beyerle, Thomas Kakuska, Valentin Erben Günther Pichler Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000026D4J Release Date: 1999-11-16 |
Tracks:
- Op. 18 No. 1 In F Major: I: Allegro Con Brio - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 1 In F Major: II: Adagio Affettuoso Ed Appassionato - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 1 In F Major: III: Scherzo (Allegro Molto) & Trio - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 1 In F Major: IV: Allegro - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 59 No. 1 In F Major 'Rasumovsky': I: Allegro - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 59 No. 1 In F Major 'Rasumovsky': II: Allegretto Vivace E Sempre Scherzando - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 59 No. 1 In F Major 'Rasumovsky': III: Adagio molto e mesto : IV: Allegro (Th russe) - Alban Berg Quartett
Tracks:
- Op. 18 No.2 In G Major: I: Allegro - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No.2 In G Major: II: Adagio cantabile - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No.2 In G Major: III: Scherzo (Allegro) & Trio - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No.2 In G Major: IV: Allegro molto, quasi presto - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 6 In B Flat Major: I: Allegro con brio - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 6 In B Flat Major: II: Adagio, ma non troppo - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 6 In B Flat Major: III: Scherzo (Allegro) & Trio - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 18 No. 6 In B Flat Major: IV: Adagio (La Malinconia) - Allegretto quasi Allegro - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 135 In F Major: I: Allegretto - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 135 In F Major: II: Vivace - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 135 In F Major: III: Lento assai, cantante e tranquillo - Alban Berg Quartett
- Op. 135 In F Major: IV: Grave, ma non troppo tratto - Allegro - Alban Berg Quartett
Tracks:
- Op. 18 No. 3 In D Major: I. Allegro
- Op. 18 No. 3 In D Major: II. Andante con moto
- III. Allegro
- Op. 18 No. 3 In D Major: IV. Presto
- Op. 18 No. 5 in A Major: I. Allegro
- Op. 18 No. 5 in A Major: II. Menuetto & Trio
- Op. 18 No. 5 in A Major: III. Andante cantabile
- Op. 18 No. 5 in A Major: IV. Allegro
- Op. 95 In F Minor: I. Allegro con brio
- Op. 95 In F Minor: II. Allegretto ma non troppo
- Op. 95 In F Minor: III: Allegro assai vivace, ma serioso
Tracks:
- Op. 18 No. 4 In C Minor: I. Allegro ma non tanto
- Op. 18 No. 4 In C Minor: II. Scherzo (Andante scherzoso quasi Allegretto)
- Op. 18 No. 4 In C Minor: III. Menuetto (Allegretto) & Trio
- Op. 18 No. 4 In C Minor: IV. Allegro
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: I. Adagio ma non troppo - Allegro
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: II. Presto
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: III. Andante con moto, ma non troppo
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: IV. Alla danza tedesca (Allegro assai)
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: V Cavatina (Adagio molto espressivo)
- Grosse Fuge In B Flat Major, Op. 133
- Op. 130 in B flat Major: VI. Finale (Allegro)
Tracks:
- Op. 59 No. 2 In E Minor 'Rasumovsky': I: Allegro
- Op. 59 No. 2 In E Minor 'Rasumovsky': II: Molto Allegro
- Op. 59 No. 2 In E Minor 'Rasumovsky': III: Allegretto
- Op. 59 No. 2 In E Minor 'Rasumovsky': IV: Finale (Presto)
- Op. 127 In E Flat Major: I: Maaestoso - Allegro
- Op. 127 In E Flat Major: II: Adagio ma non troppo, molto cantabile
- Op. 127 In E Flat Major: III: Scherzando vivace
- Op. 127 In E Flat Major: IV: Finale
Tracks:
- Op. 59 No. 3 In C Major 'Rasumovsky': I: Introduzione (Andante con moto) - Allegro vivace
- Op. 59 No. 3 In C Major 'Rasumovsky': II: Andante con moto quasi allegretto
- Op. 59 No. 3 In C Major 'Rasumovsky': III: Menuetto (Grazioso) & Trio
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: I: Adagio ma non troppo e molto espressivo
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: II: Allegro molto vivace
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: III: Allegro moderato
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: IV: Andante ma non troppo e molto cantabile
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: V: Presto
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: VI: Adagio quasi un poco andante
- Op. 131 In C Sharp Minor: VI: Adagio quasi un poco andante
Tracks:
- Op. 74 In E Flat Major 'Harp': I Poco adagio - Allegro - Beethoven
- Op. 74 In E Flat Major 'Harp': II. Adagio ma non troppo - Beethoven
- Op. 74 In E Flat Major 'Harp': III. Presto - Beethoven
- Op. 74 In E Flat Major 'Harp': IV: Allegretto con Variazioni - Beethoven
- Op.132 In A Minor: I: Allegro sostenuto - Allegro - Beethoven
- Op.132 In A Minor: II: Allegro ma non tanto - Beethoven
- Op.132 In A Minor: III: Molto adagio - Beethoven
- Op.132 In A Minor: IV: Alla marcia, assai vivace - Beethoven
Customer Reviews:
A wonderful Beethoven cycle.......2007-06-18
A LONG TIME COMING AT THIS PRICE .......2007-06-02
I went immediately to Op. 135 and found it marvelous in concept, execution and recording. I've now listened to almost all the quartets, and the consistency is wonderful. Because I'm in the business I'm using only high end professional equipment for playback and the sound is truly "You Are There". The recordings capture the upper overtones of all the instruments without the least harhsness, no mean feat. The blend of the group and the hall is articulated in a way that happens on only a very few recordings. Ocassionally one can hear a minor difference in what might be placement of microphones, even from movement to movement. This could, in fact, be the result of a temperature or humidity change in the recording venue. You have to pay very close attention to notice this and it does nothing to diminish these sonic wonders) Worth thrice the price.
What more can be said?.......2007-02-03
With the Best of the Best.......2006-12-14
What sound problems????.......2006-11-14
I have been listening to this mostly Live set for a few years now on high end Audiophile equipment and notice NO problems with sound at all.
It is clear, clean, crisp, transparent and rich with no "glare" at all.
if it is "well lit", this would suit Beethoven's strings perfectly.
An absolutely stunning performance with a Superb sound stage and sound.
All the other reviewers and the buyers who agree with their assessments (a hundred of them) can't be wrong.
With all due respect, Perhaps Mr. Townsend is listening to this on an Aiwa bookshelf System. Perhaps.
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Brahms: Complete Piano Quartets
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041EI Release Date: 1996-04-09 |
Tracks:
- Piano Quartet In G Minor, Op. 25: 1. Allegro - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet In G Minor, Op. 25: 2. Intermezzo. Allegro ma non troppo - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet In G Minor, Op. 25: 3. Andante con moto - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet In G Minor, Op. 25: 4. Rondo alla Zingarese. Presto - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 60: 1. Allegro ma non troppo - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 60: 2. Scherzo. Allegro - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 60: 3. Andante - J. Brahms
- Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 60: Finale. Allegro - J. Brahms
Tracks:
- Piano Quartet in A, Op. 26: 1. Allegro non troppo - Brahms
- Piano Quartet in A, Op. 26: 2. Poco adagio - Brahms
- Piano Quartet in A, Op. 26: 3. Scherzo. Poco allegro - Brahms
- Piano Quartet in A, Op. 26: 4. Finale. Allegro - Brahms
- Piano Trio in A, Op. posth.: 1. Moderato - Brahms
- Piano Trio in A, Op. posth.: 2. Vivace - Brahms
- Piano Trio in A, Op. posth.: 3. Lento - Brahms
- Piano Trio in A, Op. posth.: 4. Presto - Brahms
Customer Reviews:
great musicians.......2005-10-09
An older recording, but still amazing.......2002-06-23
I like to say about Brahms' music that it is airtight. There is never a wasted note. Every bit of melody, every nuance and texture in the harmony are masterfully crafted and serve a purpose. There is never a moment when you look at your watch and wonder when the composer is going to get around to wrapping this or that section up and get to the exciting stuff.
The Beaux Arts Trio along with Walter Trampler do a commendable job of bringing every moment of beauty and excitement out. They balance the sweetness of the slow movements and melodies well with the aggression and rhythmic complexities of the quicker movements. My current favorite quartet is the A Major. There is a singable melody or rhythmic puzzle in every movement. I listened to the final movement four times today (excessive I know, but it's just so much fun to try to figure out how Brahms manipulates those melodies within the time signatures)!
great recording.......2002-05-17
Very good!.......2001-04-01
stirring!.......2000-01-10
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Haydn: String Quartets, Op. 76, Nos. 4, 5 and 6
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000013OQ Release Date: 1992-09-04 |
Tracks:
- Allegro Con Spirito
- Adagio
- Menuetto: Allegro
- Finale: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- Allegretto - Allegro
- Largo Cantabile E Mesto
- Menuetto: Allegro
- Finale: Presto
- Allegretto - Allegro
- Fantasia: Adagio
- Menuetto: Presto
- Finale: Allegro Spirituoso
Customer Reviews:
exemplifying the full extent of Haydn's virtuosity.......2006-07-20
The Op. 76 quartets are the place to start in listening to Haydn's quartets. He sometimes equaled these exemplary compositions, in earlier works as well as later ones, but he never bettered them. Op. 76 belong to that rarefied list of powerful, progressive masterworks written at the end of his life that includes the Trumpet Concerto, The Creation, Paukenmesse, and, yes, the aforementioned London Symphonies.
(Especially beautiful on this disc is the adagio of the E-flat quartet: harmonically adventurous, mysterious, and captivating, I've returned to it more than once.)
I have elsewhere stated my preference and conviction for authentic, "period instrument" performances of these works; while I do prefer the accounts of the Quatuor Mosaïques to these readings, then, I at the same time insist that these are interpretations not to be missed. Readings of the Baroque and Classical literature on modern instruments can still be very effective, if an awareness of the character and function of timbre and sonority in those historical musical languages is incorporated into playing of skill and good judgement (the academy of St. Martin in the Fields under Neville Mariner, for example, have committed excellent performances of the late Mozart symphonies to disc on modern instruments). The Kodály Quartet are a first-rate ensemble and they dig into these pieces with expertise and enthusiasm. And for only ten dollars per disk on Naxos, you really mustn't pass on these recordings.
Haydn's "Famous 30" Quartets.......2005-07-29
You know the old saying, "you get what you pay for." This is usually true for sure ... but once in a while in life something comes around whose quality and value far exceed the price. Such is the case with the Naxos recordings of the Kodaly Quartet. These are performances of top caliber recorded with very good to excellent sound quality.
But, where to start with so many Haydn quartets? One suggestion is to get the Naxos SETS of these works which are an even more stellar bargin. You can get them at rediculously low prices used on Amazon usually. But, if you are buying one CD at-a-time (which perhaps allows for more appreciation and slower savoring), you might focus on what is known as "Haydn's Top 30." This is a list of Haydn's quartets that are recognized by many experts as his finest: Op. 3 (no. 3,5) - Op.9 (no. 2) - Op. 17 (no. 5) - Op. 20 (no. 4,5,6) - Op. 33 (No. 2,3,6) - Op. 50 (no. 6) - Op. 54 (no. 1,2,3) - Op. 64 (all) - Op. 74 (no. 1,2,3) - Op. 76 (all) - Op. 77 (no. 1,2).
Quartets prior to Op. 17 have more of a simpler, pleasant "galante" style ... Op. 20 sees Haydn fully in his "Storm & Stress" period with bold harmonies and dynamic rhythms ... By Op. 33 Haydn had moved on from the pre-Romantic-era emotive composing of Op. 20 and adopted a more lyrical style .... the quartets of Op. 64 have a really gorgeous and relaxed style ... then in Op. 76 & 77 we see the pinnacle of Haydn's quartet craft late in his life with quartets rich in intelligent form, complex part writing and more grand 'symphonic' harmonies - part due to his writing for large London audiences. A good place to start is to get one CD each from Haydn's early, middle and late periods - like Op. 3, Op. 33 and Op. 76 - and see the development that occured as Haydn literally gave birth to the modern string quartet.
Exploring the Haydn Quartets -- Op. 76 nos. 4-6.......2004-10-05
The quartet no. 4 in B-flat major is known as the "Sunrise" after the running, rising theme in the first violin, set over heavy chords, with which it opens. The first movement, marked allegro con spirito, is a movement of contrasts. As do several other movements on this CD, it features alternating sections of fast and slow sections, rising and falling solo themes, and ensemble and solo playing. The second movement, marked adagio, continues to alternate solo passages for the violin with intricate playing for the entire ensemble. There is also a lovely theme deep in the lower register of the cello. This is a slow, sad movement. The third movement is a minuet which features echoing falling two-note figures heavily accented at the end of each phrase. The trio continues the pattern established in the earlier movements by having a solo theme sing out over chords in the remainder of the ensemble. The final movement is a rondo which opens with a whimsical, song-like theme played in the ensemble. As the movement progresses, the tempo increases, and the quartet ends humorously with a whirwind version of the rondo theme.
The fifth quartet in D major is unique in that each of the four movements develop essentially the same thematic material. The opening movement is an allegretto which opens quietly and lyrically in the violin. Here again, the movement dramatically picks up in tempo near the conclusion. The second movement of the work marked "Largo cantabile e mesto" (very slow, singing, and troubled) is the highpoint of this work. The slow movement is substantially longer than the opening movement, which is itself highly unusual in a composition of this period. The movement opens with a slow stately theme followed by an intense middle section in different harmonies and then a return of the opening material. The minuet opens in the alto voice of the strings, but the most striking feature of this movement is the ruminative, running solo for the cello in the trio. The finale, marked presto, consists of a running theme over a brushing figure in the strings. It reminded me of a Russian folk tune and of Beethoven's middle quartets.
The sixth and final quartet of opus 76 is in E-flat major and brings an extraordinary end to the set. The first movement, marked allegro-allegretto, is a set of variations based on a call and response theme. The variations feature solo instruments embellishing the theme as played by the ensemble. Again, this movement masterfully alternates fast and slow sections and ensemble and solo playing. There is a great deal of counterpoint throughout. The second movement marked "Fantasia:Adagio" is full of adventurous harmonic writing based upon rapid and ambiguous movements from one key to another. In much of this movement, Haydn dispensed with the use of a key signature, giving both the music and the notation a strikingly modern flavor. The third movement, a minuet, opens with a theme with many turns and twists for the violin in its upper register. But, again, the striking portion of this movement is in the trio. Haydn writes it in an old form called the Alternativo. The pattern is a rising heavily rhythmic passage in the cello playing the major scale, followed by a descending passage playing the scale. This is a delight to follow when one is prepared for it. The finale, allegro spirituoso, is based upon a falling figure. It is light and rapid and shows Haydn's mastery of counterpoint.
The music of these quartets, and of the earlier three quartets of opus 76 is inexhaustible. This CD is an outstanding introduction to chamber music and to the music of Haydn.
Best of the Best.......2001-11-16
Finest of all is the "Fifths Quartet," so called because of the first violinist's widely spaced intervals at the start of the first movement. Haydn is not always congenial when he writes in the minor key, but here he creates a movement of great drama and energy that is unique in his oeuvre. The other movements are just as fine, especially the remarkable canonic scherzo, a bewitching witches' dance.
But then the other quartets are no also-rans. The "Emperor" features lovely variations on Haydn's own hymn to the emperor of the Austro-Hungarian Empire ("Glorious Things of Thee Are Spoken") and a last movement of great dash and sparkle. And the "Sunrise" has that wonderfully evocative rising figure at the beginning of the movement that gave the quartet its name.
The Kodaly Quartet, as throughout their Haydn cycle, show they are to the manner born. They caress those lovely variations with a much tenderness, then throw themselves with great abandon into the fiery "Fifths" quartet. All of which makes for just about the best performances of these quartets on disc. Naxos adds a warm yet clear and detailed recording to top off a highly distinguished release.
Brilliantly performed Haydn string quartets!.......2000-07-12
The engineering and sound quality of this CD are excellent. The balance between four members of the quartet is nearly perfect, giving the performances a wonderful sense of realism and immediacy. The acoustics of the recording venue are warm and spacious.
Awarded a "rosette" by the Penguin Guide to Compact Discs, (the "rosette" is the Penguin Guide's the highest accolade, given to a recording of special distinction.) this CD is a special listening experience in every way. Highly recommended!
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Mendelssohn: The Complete String Quartets / Emerson String Quartet
Felix Mendelssohn , and Emerson String Quartet Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0006TN9G2 Release Date: 2005-01-11 |
Tracks:
- I. Adagio - Allegro Vivace
- II. Adagio Non Lento
- III. Intermezzo: Allegretto Con Moto
- IV. Presto
- A Tempo Ordinario
- I. Adaigo Non Troppo - Allegro Non Tardante
- II. Canzonetta: Allegretto
- III. Andante Espressivo
- IV. Molto Allegro E Vivace
Tracks:
- I. Allegro Assai Appassionato
- II. Scherzo: Allegro Di Molto
- III. Andante
- IV. Presto Agitato
- I. Allegro Vivace
- II. Scherzo: Assai Leggiero Vivace
- III. Adagio Non Troppo
- IV. Molto Allegro Con Fuoco
Tracks:
- I. Molto Allegro Vivace
- II. Menuetto: Un Poco Allegretto
- III. Andante Espressivo Ma Con Moto
- IV. Presto Con Brio
- Andante con Moto - Allegro Fugato, Assai Vivace
- I. Allegro Vivace Assai
- II. Allegro Assai
- III. Adagio
- IV. Finale: Allegro Molto
- Andante Sostenuto
- Allegro Leggiero
Tracks:
- I. Allegro Moderato, Ma Con Fuoco
- II. Andante
- III. Scherzo: Allegro Leggierissimo
- IV. Presto
- I. Allegro Moderato
- II. Adagio Non Troppo
- III. Minuetto
- IV. Fuga
Amazon.com
Trust the Emerson Quartet to do nothing by halves. This 4-CD set presents all of Mendelssohn's quartets, including one written at 14, the five pieces Op. 81, as well as the Octet. This set should disprove the assertion that Mendelssohn, a sensational prodigy, blossomed young and never developed further. The difference in compositional skill and emotional depth between the early and late quartets is unmistakable; the miracle is that he could write the Octet at 16. The quartets are of uneven quality: Op. 44 No. 3 is distinctly inferior to the more-familiar Nos. 1 and 2; of the two Fugues Op. 81, the later one is far better. The quartets Op. 12 and 13 (written in reverse order) pay homage to Beethoven in Mendelssohn's very own romantic voice. Op. 80 is masterful although perhaps less disciplined: written just after his beloved sister Fanny's death and shortly before his own, it is a turbulent, heart-rending outcry of anguish. Some of the most-magical moments occur in the inimitable Scherzi and Intermezzi. The performances are vintage Emerson: impeccable individually and together, beautiful in sound, clear, carefully worked out. Although generally a little cool, they can rise to considerable warmth and passion. Not surprisingly, the best pieces elicit the most involved, exciting playing. As always, the violinists switch parts, but the whole group also alternates old Italian and modern American instruments, for the players have a surprise in store: they give the Octet a new twist by "doubling" on all eight parts through a complicated process of over-dubbing (a documentary video of the recording process is included). Here, using the different instruments is intended to combine the old and the new and to give the voices more-distinct timbres. However, the differences throughout are imperceptible. The idea of playing the Octet with themselves, so to speak, is intriguing, but the result is disappointing. Hearing four rather than eight individual voices is disconcerting, and worse, the balance is completely awry, especially in the corner movements. The busy tremolo accompaniment makes the middle register thick and heavy, the tone gets rough, important lines are obscured, and the Quartet's customary admirable textural transparency is lost. And even a cellist as splendid as David Finckel cannot save the opening of the Fugue from sounding like a growl. This may be a triumph of recording technology, but it adds nothing to the music or the performance. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
First Rate Performances.......2006-09-18
Fantastic.......2006-07-01
In the privacy of my living room, on several occasions I stood up and cheered! Absolutely magnificent. Enough said.
Highly recommended.
Beautiful Performances.......2005-09-10
Naturally, the early quartets (written in 1827 and 1829 but published in reverse order in 1830) reflect the influence of other composers, most notably Beethoven. The movements of these quartets were linked by thematic ideas. The quartet in A minor uses Mendelssohn's song Frage (Question) as the musical link. The quartet in E-Flat (Op. 12) was composed during Mendelssohn's trip to the British Isles, which also inspired his Scottish Symphony and Hebrides Overture.
When Mendelssohn next turned to the form he was the director of the Gewandhaus and a famous composer. The composition of the three quartets Op. 44 (number 3, 4 and 5) occurred after his marriage to Cecile Jeanrenaud in 1837 and were composed during his two month long honeymoon. These quartets reflect the composer's maturity and accessible style. The sixth quartet was published after Mendelssohn's death and was written following the sudden death of his sister Fanny in May 1847. It follows that the quartet is darker than the others and is agitated and dissonant in tone; the first movement begins with dark tones from the cello then proceeds with a beautiful melody punctuated with tremolos. The scherzo is characterized by an unusual tempo that has a frantic quality to it. The Adagio allows Mendelssohn to fully express his grief and the Finale has the syncopated rhythm of the scherzo.
The five pieces collected as Op. 81 contain what probably are two movements for an unfinished quartet - a Theme and Variations in E major and Scherzo in A minor. It was reported by the composer Ignaz Moschelles that Mendelssohn was at work on a new string quartet before his death and of these two pieces the Theme and Variations is closest to the description of the work. The earliest of Mendelssohn's quartets appears last on the CDs and is a pleasant work written under the influence of Mozart and Haydn.
The Octet receives a marvelous performance with the Emerson playing all of the parts with each member playing different instruments and seated in different positions during the recording sessions.
The performances are impeccable with beautiful and clear sound. I purchased the set anticipating a performance of three of the quartets by the Emerson. As I have listened to the set the warmth and sensitivity of the playing makes this the Mendelssohn quartets to own. I have only become interested in chamber music in recent years and Mendelssohn was a natural choice for me because of his gift of melody. I think this music would appeal to someone getting to know chamber music.
LIKE WATER FROM A PUBLIC FOUNTAIN.......2005-05-12
The performers are the Emerson Quartet, and the quality of their work is well known. In every imaginable respect it is superlatively good. Technically these accounts are flawless, and in terms of comprehension of the music and insight into the spirit of the composer I prefer to learn from them rather than to pass otiose comment. There are 7 complete quartets here, plus 5 isolated movements. Being moderately familiar with the music I would advise newcomers that the approach taken throughout is `normal' in the best sense and free from idiosyncrasies - if you are looking for `model' performances of these works this would be where to look. Mendelssohn's tempo markings, unlike those of greater composers such as Beethoven Schubert and Brahms, are almost invariably clear and unambiguous. In the one case where a bit of interpretation is called for, the central two movements of the D major quartet op44/1, I am convinced and delighted by the solution adopted. The Emersons take the minuet slowly and the following `andante con moto' at a very flowing pace, almost like an andante in Handel, so that the minuet seems like the slow movement and the andante like an intermezzo in moderate tempo.
I love Mendelssohn and I love these quartets. However I can't get it out of my mind that Wagner had a bit of a point. Shaw complains of Mendelssohn's `kid-glove gentility' and he is uncomfortably near the bone. Mendelssohn is truly unique, and what he does best he does better than anybody. At the age of 16 or 17 he turned out the octet, the rondo capriccioso for piano and the Midsummer Night's Dream overture, all of them truly astounding. However by age 20 he was only one precocious prodigy among a larger number who had caught up by then and went on to surpass him. There is a definite sense of development as between the quartet he wrote at age 14 (contemporary with the string symphonies, which I commend strongly to those unfamiliar with them) where the unmistakable personal idiom has not yet quite emerged and the op12/13 quartets and then the op44's and later in which it has. However it's development within a narrow range of expression, and his early death means we can never know whether he had it in him to raise his game drastically, as Wagner and Verdi so spectacularly did when older than Mendelssohn lived to be.
The Emersons have also taken it into their heads to record the octet played by themselves only. People with their amount of talent must be tempted to such brilliant but completely dotty schemes at times. There is an enthusiastic contribution to the liner-note by Eugene Drucker, and the disc will run on a pc to show the process of recording. I can confirm that it actually does this, but I have no sound-card nor any wish for one, so all I can attest is the visual aspect, and only a little of that. I must also warn that I had difficulty in getting the exit-button to obey me. As a performance it is really very good, with the finale fully up to speed as I like it, and I would never have known what nonsense they were getting up to. However something goes wrong with the recording, which is very bottom-heavy in the first movement in particular.
Otherwise the recording is excellent. The main liner-note is fine if a little lengthy. When I began to think it didn't really say a lot, that brought me back to the question - how much, really, is there to say?
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Haydn: Complete String Quartets
Angeles String Quartet Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000501PC Release Date: 2001-05-22 |
Tracks:
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.0: I. Presto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.0: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.0: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.0: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.0: V. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.1 No.1: I. Presto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.1 No.1: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.1 No.1: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.1 No.1: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.1 No.1: V. Presto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.1 No.2: I. Allegro
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.1 No.2: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.1 No.2: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.1 No.2: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.1 No.2: V. Presto
- Str Qt in D, Op.1 No.3: I. Adagio
- Str Qt in D, Op.1 No.3: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in D, Op.1 No.3: III. Presto
- Str Qt in D, Op.1 No.3: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in D, Op.1 No.3: V. Finale: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in G, Op.1 No.4: I. Presto
- Str Qt in G, Op.1 No.4: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in G, Op.1 No.4: III. Adagio Ma Non Tanto
- Str Qt in G, Op.1 No.4: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in G, Op.1 No.4: V. Presto
- Str Qt in C, Op.1 No.6: I. Presto Assai
- Str Qt in C, Op.1 No.6: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in C, Op.1 No.6: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in C, Op.1 No.6: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in C, Op.1 No.6: V. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in A, Op.2 No.1: I. Allegro
- Str Qt in A, Op.2 No.1: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in A, Op.2 No.1: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in A, Op.2 No.1: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in A, Op.2 No.1: V. Allegro Molto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in E, Op.2 No.2: I. Allegro Molto
- Str Qt in E, Op.2 No.2: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E, Op.2 No.2: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E, Op.2 No.2: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E, Op.2 No.2: V. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in F, Op.2 No.4: I. Presto
- Str Qt in F, Op.2 No.4: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in F, Op.2 No.4: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in F, Op.2 No.4: IV Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in F, Op.2 No.4: V. Allegro
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.2 No.6: I. Adagio
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.2 No.6: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.2 No.6: III. Presto: Scherzo
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.2 No.6: IV. Menuetto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.2 No.6: V. Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in C, Op.9 No.1: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in C, Op.9 No.1: II. Menuetto: Un Poco Allegretto
- Str Qt in C, Op.9 No.1: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in C, Op.9 No.1: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.9 No.2: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.9 No.2: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.9 No.2: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.9 No.2: IV. Finale: Allegro Molto
- Str Qt in G, Op.9 No.3: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in G, Op.9 No.3: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in G, Op.9 No.3: III. Largo
- Str Qt in G, Op.9 No.3: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in d, Op.9 No.4: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in d, Op.9 No.4: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in d, Op.9 No.4: III. Adagio Cantabile
- Str Qt in d, Op.9 No.4: IV. Finale: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.9 No.5: I. Poco Adagio: Theme And Vars
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.9 No.5: II. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.9 No.5: III. Largo Cantabile
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.9 No.5: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in A, Op.9 No.6: I. Presto
- Str Qt in A, Op.9 No.6: II. Menuetto
- Str Qt in A, Op.9 No.6: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in A, Op.9 No.6: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in E, Op.17 No.1: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in E, Op.17 No.1: II. Menuet
- Str Qt in E, Op.17 No.1: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E, Op.17 No.1: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in F, Op.17 No.2: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in F, Op.17 No.2: II. Menuet: Poco Allegretto
- Str Qt in F, Op.17 No.2: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in F, Op.17 No.2: IV. Finale: Allegro Di Molto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.17 No.3: I. Andante Grazioso
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.17 No.3: II. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.17 No.3: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.17 No.3: IV. Allegro Di Molto
- Str Qt in c, Op.17 No.4: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in c, Op.17 No.4: II. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in c, Op.17 No.4: III. Adagio Cantabile
- Str Qt in c, Op.17 No.4: IV. Finale: Allegro
- Str Qt in G, Op.17 No.5: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in G, Op.17 No.5: II. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in G, Op.17 No.5: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in G, Op.17 No.5: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in D, Op.17 No.6: I. Presto
- Str Qt in D, Op.17 No.6: II. Menuet
- Str Qt in D, Op.17 No.6: III. Largo
- Str Qt in D, Op.17 No.6: IV. Finale: Allegro
Tracks:
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.20 No.1: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.20 No.1: II. Menuet: Un Poco Allegretto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.20 No.1: III. Affettuoso E Sostenuto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.20 No.1: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in C, Op.20 No.2: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in C, Op.20 No.2: II. Capriccio: Adagio
- Str Qt in C, Op.20 No.2: III. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in C, Op.20 No.2: IV. Fuga A Quattro Soggeti: Allegro
- Str Qt in g, Op.20 No.3: I. Allegro Con Spirito
- Str Qt in g, Op.20 No.3: II. Menuet: Allegretto
- Str Qt in g, Op.20 No.3: III. Poco Adagio
- Str Qt in g, Op.20 No.3: IV. Allegro Di Molto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in D, Op.20 No.4: I. Allegro Di Molto
- Str Qt in D, Op.20 No.4: II. Un Poco Adagio E Affettuoso
- Str Qt in D, Op.20 No.4: II. Menuet Alla Zingarese
- Str Qt in D, Op.20 No.4: IV. Presto E Scherzando
- Str Qt in f, Op.20 No.5: I. Moderato
- Str Qt in f, Op.20 No.5: II. Menuet
- Str Qt in f, Op.20 No.5: III. Adagio
- Str Qt in f, Op.20 No.5: IV. Fuga A Due Soggetti
- Str Qt in A, Op.20 No.6: I. Allegro Di Molto E Scherzando
- Str Qt in A, Op.20 No.6: II. Adagio
- Str Qt in A, Op.20 No.6: III. Menuetto
- Str Qt in A, Op.20 No.6: IV. Fuga A Tre Soggetti: Allegro
Tracks:
- Str Qt in b, Op.33 No.1: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in b, Op.33 No.1: II. Scherzo: Allegro
- Str Qt in b, Op.33 No.1: III. Andante
- Str Qt in b, Op.33 No.1: IV. Presto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.33 No.2 'The Joke': I. Allegro Moderato, Cantabile
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.33 No.2 'The Joke': II. Scherzo: Allegro
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.33 No.2 'The Joke': III. Largo Sostenuto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.33 No.2 'The Joke': IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in C, Op.33 No.3 'The Bird': I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in C, Op.33 No.3 'The Bird': II. Scherzo: Allegretto
- Str Qt in C, Op.33 No.3 'The Bird': III. Adagio
- Str Qt in C, Op.33 No.3 'The Bird': IV. Rondo: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.33 No.4: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.33 No.4: II. Scherzo: Allegretto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.33 No.4: III. Largo
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.33 No.4: IV. Presto
- Str Qt in G, Op.33 No.5: I. Vivace Assai
- Str Qt in G, Op.33 No.5: II. Largo E Cantabile
- Str Qt in G, Op.33 No.5: III. Scherzo: Allegro
- Str Qt in G, Op.33 No.5: IV. Finale: Allegretto
- Str Qt in D, Op.33 No.6: I. Vivace Assai
- Str Qt in D, Op.33 No.6: II. Andante
- Str Qt in D, Op.33 No.6: III. Scherzo: Allegretto
- Str Qt in D, Op.33 No.6: IV. Finale: Allegretto
- Str Qt in d, Op.42: I. Andante Ed Innocentemente
- Str Qt in d, Op.42: II. Menuet
- Str Qt in d, Op.42: III. Adagio E Cantabile
- Str Qt in d, Op.42: IV. Finale: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.50 No.1: I. Allegro
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.50 No.1: II. Adagio Non Lento
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.50 No.1: III. Poco Allegretto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.50 No.1: IV. Finale: Vivace
- Str Qt in C, Op.50 No.2: I. Vivace
- Str Qt in C, Op.50 No.2: II. Adagio Cantabile
- Str Qt in C, Op.50 No.2: III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in C, Op.50 No.2: IV. Finale: Vivace Assai
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.50 No.3: I. Allegro Con Brio
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.50 No.3: II. Andante Piu Tosto Allegretto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.50 No.3: III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in E flat, Op.50 No.3: IV. Finale: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in f#, Op.50 No.4: I. Allegro Spirito
- Str Qt in f#, Op.50 No.4: II. Andante
- Str Qt in f#, Op.50 No.4: III. Menuetto
- Str Qt in f#, Op.50 No.4: IV. Fuga: Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in F, Op.50 No.5: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in F, Op.50 No.5: II. Poco Adagio
- Str Qt in F, Op.50 No.5: III. Menuetto
- Str Qt in F, Op.50 No.5: IV. Finale: Vivace
- Str Qt in D, Op.50 No.6 'The Frog': I. Allegro
- Str Qt in D, Op.50 No.6 'The Frog': II. Poco Adagio
- Str Qt in D, Op.50 No.6 'The Frog': III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in D, Op.50 No.6 'The Frog': IV. Finale: Allegro Con Spirito
Tracks:
- Str Qt inG, Op.54 No.1: I. Vivace Assai
- Str Qt inG, Op.54 No.1: II. Allegretto
- Str Qt inG, Op.54 No.1: III. Menuet
- Str Qt inG, Op.54 No.1: IV. Vivace
- Str Qt in C, Op.54 No.2: I. Vivace
- Str Qt in C, Op.54 No.2: II. Adagio -
- Str Qt in C, Op.54 No.2: III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in C, Op.54 No.2: IV. Adagio
- Str Qt in E, Op.54 No.3: I. Allegretto
- Str Qt in E, Op.54 No.3: II. Largo
- Str Qt in E, Op.54 No.3: III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in E, Op.54 No.3: IV. Finale: Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in A, Op.55 No.1: I. Allegro
- Str Qt in A, Op.55 No.1: II. Adagio Cantabile
- Str Qt in A, Op.55 No.1: III. Menuet
- Str Qt in A, Op.55 No.1: IV. Finale: Vivace
- Str Qt in f, Op.55 No.2 'The Razor': I. Andante
- Str Qt in f, Op.55 No.2 'The Razor': II. Allegro
- Str Qt in f, Op.55 No.2 'The Razor': III. Menuetto: Allegretto
- Str Qt in f, Op.55 No.2 'The Razor': IV. Presto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.55 No.3: I. Vivace Assai
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.55 No.3: II. Adagio Ma Non Troppo
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.55 No.3: III. Menuetto
- Str Qt in B flat, Op.55 No.3: IV. Presto
Tracks:
- Str Qt in C, Op.64 No.1: I. Allegro Moderato
- Str Qt in C, Op.64 No.1: II. Menuet: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- Str Qt in C, Op.64 No.1: III. Allegretto Scherzando
- Str Qt in C, Op.64 No.1: IV. Finale: Presto
- Str Qt in b, Op.64 No.3: I. Allegro Spirito
- Str Qt in b, Op.64 No.3: II. Adagio Ma Non Troppo
- Str Qt in b, Op.64 No.3: III. Menuet: Allegretto -
Amazon.com's Best of 2001
A massive set--67 string quartets on 21 discs in a budget-priced, shelf-friendly, compact box. So the obvious question is: do you need it? The equally obvious answer is a resounding "yes" if you love these endlessly inventive quartets and if you appreciate superbly played performances that capture both the letter and the spirit of Haydn's genius. The Angeles String Quartet isn't as well known as some ensembles that have recorded complete Haydn sets, but they are superior to all, with the arguable exception of the Tatrai Quartet. They demonstrate technical polish and rich, warm sound that's never cloying. And they give these works the forward-moving impetus they need within a classical framework, eschewing both anachronistic Romanticism and the mechanical astringency of period specialists.The Angeles Quartet is unique in its mastery of early as well as late works, in tune with Haydn's stylistic development and sensitive to the attractions of each of these remarkable pieces. So they infuse the visionary slow movements of the late quartets with the appropriate depth and at the same time revel in the muscularity of the Opus 76 No.2's catchy Menuetto, the humor of the "Joke" Quartet, Opus 33 No.2, and the power of the Allegro con spirito of Opus 76 No.1. Most impressive is their way with the early quartets--no small matter when you consider that the contents of the first six discs precede the Opus 20 set generally considered as signaling the maturity of the form. The Angeles make even the earliest quartets, five-movement divertimentos for four strings, a habit-forming delight. Their playing here is full of exuberance, wittily playful and rough, peasantlike by turns. The sonics are outstanding, too, well-balanced, warm, and lifelike. An indispensable recording. --Dan Davis
Customer Reviews:
A superb Haydn benchmark.......2007-06-28
But there are nonetheless good reasons trying to grasp Haydn's music, at least partly. This bargain set - 68 string quartets on 21 CDs - is a perfectly good reason. Haydn's string quartets contain some of his finest music. And the present recordings with Angeles Quartet are simply superb. Unlike many period instrument performers, Angeles Quartet avoids meticulous mannerism and plays this music with energy and passion, without loosing structural control. Furthermore, the recordings are excellent, with a rich, creamy and spacious sound. In short, great performances and excellent engineering. A benchmark recording, no less.
There are some rival complete sets: Aeolian Quartet (Decca), Festetics Quartet (period instrument performances, Arcana), Tátrai (Hungaroton), and Kodaly Quartet (Naxos). In terms of sound, the present set is clearly preferable. In terms of performances, the only serious rival is Tátrai Quartet's classic collection from the sixties. But Angeles Quartet is not a second choice. If you hesitate, you need both. Budget and shelf space minded collectors need not hesitate.
Perfect Dinner Music.......2007-05-14
I have found that after listening to it hundreds of times that using iTunes in shuffle mode keeps it fresh.
Delightful Background Music.......2006-03-04
The Angeles String Quartet does an excellent job, and all of the works are so tuneful that I frequently found myself walking around the house humming the tunes after hearing a quartet for the first time.
He truly is the father of string quartets!.......2005-09-27
If you've already explored Haydn's universe through some of his glorious symphonies, these string quartets are an excellent way of further expanding your appreciation of Haydn's music. There are very few dull moments in this lot (and almost all of them are to be found in his early quartets, while there are a few in his very latest works, where he seems to have lost the energy and brio that had established him as one of the best composers of his time). His first works have five movements and ressemble the divertimenti or serenatas. Later on, his quartets took a form which was to become standard, both for Haydn and other composers: four movements - a fast one, a slow one, a minuet and trio and a fast finale.
If one listens to Haydn's string quartes in chronological order, one can feel and appreciate his growth and maturity as a composer. The motives introduced during the first movement are developed over the entire work entity, the increasing use of first movements that are monothematic, the expansion of harmonic usage, the combination of serious with funny, intellectual with ridicule, etc.
Both Mozart and Beethoven wrote famous series of string quartets, but I've always liked Haydn's quartets the most. My personal favorites are op. 76 (especially no 3, which later on became the German National Anthem), op. 64 (especially no 5 called "The lark") and op. 33 (where Haydn introduced special effects, like a birdcall, which gave the third quartet its name).
A matter of taste?.......2005-05-31
Average customer rating:
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Schubert: The String Quartets
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00002DEH3 Release Date: 1999-11-09 |
Tracks:
- String Quartet (In Various Keys), D 18 (No.1): Andante - Presto vivace
- String Quartet (In Various Keys), D 18 (No.1): Menuetto
- String Quartet (In Various Keys), D 18 (No.1): Andante
- String Quartet (In Various Keys), D 18 (No.1): Presto
- String Quartet in C major, D 32 (No.2): Presto
- String Quartet in C major, D 32 (No.2): Andante
- String Quartet in C major, D 32 (No.2): Menuetto. Allegro
- String Quartet in C major, D 32 (No.2): Allegro con spirito
- String Quartet in B flat major, D 36 (No.3): Allegro
- String Quartet in B flat major, D 36 (No.3): Andante
- String Quartet in B flat major, D 36 (No.3): Menuetto. Allegro non troppo
- String Quartet in B flat major, D 36 (No.3): Allegretto
- Quartet Movement In C Minor, D 103: Grave - Allegro
Tracks:
- String Quartet in C major, D 46 (No.4): Adagio - Allegro con moto
- String Quartet in C major, D 46 (No.4): Andante con moto
- String Quartet in C major, D 46 (No.4): Menuetto. Allegro
- String Quartet in C major, D 46 (No.4): Allegro
- String Quartet In B Flat Major, D 68 (No.5): Allegro
- String Quartet In B Flat Major, D 68 (No.5): Allegro
- String Quartet In D Major, D 74 (No. 6): Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet In D Major, D 74 (No. 6): Andante
- String Quartet In D Major, D 74 (No. 6): Menuetto. Allegro
- String Quartet In D Major, D 74 (No. 6): Allegro
Tracks:
- String Quartet In D Major, D 94 (No. 7): Allegro
- String Quartet In D Major, D 94 (No. 7): Andante con moto
- String Quartet In D Major, D 94 (No. 7): Menuetto. Allegro
- String Quartet In D Major, D 94 (No. 7): Presto
- String Quartet In B-Flat Major, D 112 (No. 8): Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet In B-Flat Major, D 112 (No. 8): Andante sostenuto
- String Quartet In B-Flat Major, D 112 (No. 8): Menuetto. Allegro
- String Quartet In B-Flat Major, D 112 (No. 8): Presto
- String Quartet In G Minor, D 173 (No. 9): Allegro con brio
- String Quartet In G Minor, D 173 (No. 9): Andantino
- String Quartet In G Minor, D 173 (No. 9): Menuetto. Allegro vivace
- String Quartet In G Minor, D 173 (No. 9): Allegro
Tracks:
- String Quartet In E-Flat Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 1, D 87 (No. 10): Allegro moderato
- String Quartet In E-Flat Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 1, D 87 (No. 10): Adagio
- String Quartet In E-Flat Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 1, D 87 (No. 10): Scherzo. Prestissimo
- String Quartet In E-Flat Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 1, D 87 (No. 10): Allegro
- String Quartet In A Minor, Op. 29, No. 1, D 804 (No. 13) 'Rosamunde': Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet In A Minor, Op. 29, No. 1, D 804 (No. 13) 'Rosamunde': Andante
- String Quartet In A Minor, Op. 29, No. 1, D 804 (No. 13) 'Rosamunde': Menuetto. Allegretto
- String Quartet In A Minor, Op. 29, No. 1, D 804 (No. 13) 'Rosamunde': Allegro moderato
Tracks:
- String Quartet In E Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 2, D 353 (No. 11): Allegro con fuoco
- String Quartet In E Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 2, D 353 (No. 11): Andante
- String Quartet In E Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 2, D 353 (No. 11): Menuetto. Allegro vivace
- String Quartet In E Major, Op. Post. 125, No. 2, D 353 (No. 11): Rondo. Allegro vivace
- String Quartet In D Minor, D 810 (No. 14) 'Death And The Maiden': Allegro
- String Quartet In D Minor, D 810 (No. 14) 'Death And The Maiden': Andante con moto
- String Quartet In D Minor, D 810 (No. 14) 'Death And The Maiden': Scherzo. Allegro molto
- String Quartet In D Minor, D 810 (No. 14) 'Death And The Maiden': Presto
Tracks:
- Quartet Movement In C Minor, D 703 (No. 12): Allegro assai
- String Quartet In G Major, Op. Post. 161, D 887 (No. 15): Allegro molto moderato
- String Quartet In G Major, Op. Post. 161, D 887 (No. 15): Andante un poco moto
- String Quartet In G Major, Op. Post. 161, D 887 (No. 15): Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
- String Quartet In G Major, Op. Post. 161, D 887 (No. 15): Allegro assai
Customer Reviews:
This set or the Auryn Quartet set?.......2004-06-06
To the recordings: I was just a bit disappointed. The sound seems a bit harsh in places, not as warm as sets I have by the Quartetto Italiano (Beethoven), Melos Quartet (Mozart) and Aoelian Q (Haydn). No doubt they are technically very correct, and show real liveliness - the violins just sound a bit scratchy in places.
The only other complete set seems to be the Auryn Quartet recording, highly recommended by the Penguin guide, but twice as expensive. Naxos offers 12 or the 15 quartets on 5 separate CDs. I'd liked to have heard the Auryn recording before I'd made the decision to purchase this one - who knows, I might have made the same decision anyway.
Buy it for the right reasons.......2002-10-04
or the overall feel of their playing (caring, respectful). Buy the set from the Auryn quartet if you care more about the sound quality of the recording (it is noticeably better) or if you happen to like a younger, slightly more aggressive approach.
Frankly I have both sets, and love both.
Great Music for a Good Price.......2002-05-02
Sadly, it is hard to find recordings of all but the last four. In total, there are fourteen plus two fragments- one incomplete and one lost. They are all here and at such a good deal!
The first two discs (first five quartets and a fragment) really stand out. These were quartets Schubert composed as a student and they capture well the energy of youth and have a beautifully simple quality that always makes Schubert stand out. The middle discs track his early career with a more mature motif development revealing a taste of the boldness to come from his later quartets. Not as melodic as the first quartets in my opinion, but a treat nonetheless. Then ah! the last three discs. "Rosamunde," "Death and the maiden," Quartettstatz and C 703. Can you possibly go wrong? Don't answer that. You know it doesn't get better!!
Now we come to recording quality. Well, the Melos Quartet recorded these in the mid 70's. They've been digitally touched up and well done. Still, not convincing enough to sound like new. Treble and Mid is alright but the Bass is really lacking and overall, it still lacks the full sound of recordings from the Emerson and Tokyo quartets. Still, with touchup, these recordings sound more like late 80's- Not Bad!
This is a great deal for a great price. For better quality, I also picked up Emerson's recording of the late quartets, but you will be hard pressed to find a recording of the early and middle works...and what works they are!!!
Average customer rating:
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Bela Bartok: The 6 String Quartets - Emerson String Quartet
Eugene Drucker , Lawrence Dutton , David Finckel , Philip Setzer , and Emerson String Quartet Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001G9O Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 1, Op. 7: 1. Lento - attacca
- String Quartet No. 1, Op. 7: 2. Poco e poco accelerande all' Allegretto - Introduzione. Allegro 0 attacca
- String Quartet No. 1, Op. 7: 3. Allegro vivace
- String Quartet No. 3: 1. Prima Parte: Moderato - attacca
- String Quartet No. 3: 2. Seconda parte: Allegro - attacca: Ricapitulazione della prima parte; Moderato
- String Quartet No. 3: 3. Coda: Allegro molto
- String Quartet No. 5: 1. Alllegro
- String Quartet No. 5: 2. Adagio molto
- String Quartet No. 5: 3. Scherzo: Alla bulgarese
- String Quartet No. 5: 4. Andante
- String Quartet No. 5: 5. Finale: Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 2, Op. 17: 1. Moderato
- String Quartet No. 2, Op. 17: 2. Allegro molto capriccioso
- String Quartet No. 2, Op. 17: 3. Lento
- String Quartet No. 4: 1. Allegro
- String Quartet, No. 4: 2. Prestissimo, con sordino
- String Quartet, No. 4: 3. Non troppo lento
- String Quartet, No. 4: 4. Allegretto pizzicato
- String Quartet, No. 4: 5. Allegro molto
- STRING QUARTET NO. 6: 1. Mesto-piu mosso, pensante - Vivace
- STRING QUARTET NO. 6: 2. Mesto - Marcia
- STRING QUARTET NO. 6: 3. Mesto - Burletta
- STRING QUARTET NO. 6: 4. Mesto
Amazon.com
The six quartets of Bartók have been well represented on record, far better than the six of Schoenberg or the fifteen of Shostakovich. The choice on Compact Disc, however, is an easy one, for the Emerson Quartet not only plays the music better than any other ensemble, but gets all six essays onto two discs. Making roses out of what must seem more like a collection of thistles to most others who attempt to play the set, the Emerson players show the kind of ensemble polish that caused one European critic to complain, "too smooth.... I like my Bartók rougher." But awkwardness and rhythmic uncertainty, which have made many a lesser group sound rough in this music, should not be confused with expressive edge, which the Emersons bring to the music in full measure. Their readings are extraordinarily revealing, high-intensity, not at all for the faint of heart. With the odd-numbered quartets on one disc and the even on the other, each CD is a "microcosmos" of the whole set. The sound quality is excellent throughout. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
Compositions: Outstanding! Performance: Mixed........2007-06-05
My favorite recording of these pieces is Bartók: 6 String Quartets by the Hungarian String Quartet. Since I bought that I haven't listened to other recordings of this piece.
Great technique but little soul.......2007-05-12
Brilliant playing, but lacking color and flavor.......2007-01-03
The Bartok Cycle at its Best.......2006-08-17
Enough has been written regarding their technical skills. In these, as in many other of their albums, they also provide us with an insightful interpretation.
Highly recommended.
As usual, the Emerson's just don't get it.......2006-02-09
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Shostakovich: The String Quartets
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000042HV Release Date: 1998-02-10 |
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: II. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: III. Allegro non troppo - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: IV. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: V. Moderato - Adagio - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: II. Andantino - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
Tracks:
- String Quartet No .5 In B flat Major, Op. 92: I. Allegro non troppo - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 5 In B Flat Major, Op. 92: II. Andante - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 5 In B Flat Major, Op. 92: III. Moderato - Allegretto - Andante - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: II. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: III. Lento - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No.6 in G Major, Op. 101: IV. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 7 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 7 zIn F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: II. Lento - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 7 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: III. Allegro - Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: I. Largo - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: II. Allegro molto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: IV. Largo - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: V. Largo - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: I. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: II. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: IV. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: V. Allegro - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: I. Andante - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: II. Allegretto furioso - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: III. Adagio - - D. Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: IV. Allegretto - Andante - D. Shostakovich
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: I. Introduction: Andantino - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: II. Scherzo: Allegretto - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: III. Recitative: Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: IV. Etude: Allegro - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: V. Humoresque: Allegro - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: VI. Elegy: Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: I. Finale: Moderato - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 12 In D Flat Major, Op. 133: II. Moderato - Allegreto - Dmitri Shostakovich
- Allegretto - Adagio - Moderato - Allegreto - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 13 In B Flat Minor, Op. 138: Adagio - Doppio movimento - Tempo primo - Dmitri Shostakovich
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: I. Allegretto - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: II. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: III. Allegretto - Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: I. Elegy. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: II. Serenade. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: III. Intermezzo. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: IV. Nocturne. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: V. Funeral March. Adagio molto - Dmitri Shostakovich
- String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: VI. Epilogue. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
Amazon.com
The Fitzwilliam Quartet is English by birth but shows a lot of Russian soul in these works, which were recorded in consultation with the composer. Their technique is flawless, their immersion in the music total, their interaction with one another and with the music spontaneous and intense. Priced competitively with the Borodin Quartet, they do not have any added attraction to match the Piano Quintet in that set, but this close-up stereo recording is significantly better. Highlights of the set include the relaxed, folk-flavored No. 1; the tense, autobiographical No. 8, which recalls the terrors of World War II, quotes a lot of Shostakovich's earlier works, and mourns for the "victims of fascism and war"; the contrasts of quiet beauty and fierce intensity in No. 10; and the bold structure of No. 15, Shostakovich's last quartet, in which he looks at death, steadily and without blinking. --Joe McLellanCustomer Reviews:
Hum a little Shostakovich.......2007-02-19
Not just a bargain--a must-have.......2007-02-05
Their tempi are excellent: fast when necessary, and painfully slow where Shostakovich asks for it. Perhaps my favorite point of their playing is the articulation, which is broader than most recordings I hear. Typically, they only play short when asked to in the score, and I think this sounds better than, for instance, if the opening of the Fifth Quartet, a work of enormous gravity and passion, is taken lightly.
Get this one. Highly recommended.
lusterless.......2006-11-05
Rating this bargain set against the Emersons at full price.......2006-03-09
Fitzwilliam: This set, made between 1975-77 in a church in Surrey, has the advantage of price. Although the 15 quartets are spread out over 6 CDs as compared to 5 for the Emersons, Decca offers this cycle at roughly half the cost of the DG cycle (it's much cheaper than that, even, on the used market). The performances eschew Russian soul, grit, and emotional extremes such as one hears from the Borodin Quartet. The Fitzwilliam Quartet sounds soulful but stops short of impassioned. As much as it is possible, they make this music friendly and easy to listen to without sacrificing all of its bite and sarcasm. They are not a virtuoso group (English critics actually praise them for this lack, as if the Emersons' technical mastery was a sign of glibness), so individual solo lines, of which there are many in these quartets, sound medium well played, not dazzling. Decca's sound as transferred to CD can be a bit shrill and congested but is certainly good enough. One large missing ingredient is tonal variation--the Fitzwilliam doesn't search out the peculiar tonalities that are implied in Shostakovich's string writing, which can be eerie, ghostly, brutal, and caustic by turns.
Emerson: Recorded in Aspen at intervals between 1994 and 1999, these are live performances from the music festival and are thus not ideal sonically. What's most lacking is solidity and body. Even so, the recorded sound is considerably more detailed than in the Fitzwilliam set, or any other of the four I listened to. When this cycle was first issued in 1999 it swept the field for good reason. The Emersons are head and shoulders above any other quartet for sheer virtuosity in this music. Not that virtuosity is required very often, but the many solo lines are rendered with exquisite technique, and the Emersons pay very close attention to changes in tonality. As a result, these performances are more varied and interesting to listen to than any competitor that I sampled (including the Fitzwilliam, Brodsky, Borodin, St. Petersburg, and Shostakovich quartets on various labels).
The drawbacks are price (it's hard to find even a used set for under $70) and the prevalent accusation, from some quarters, that the Emersons lack Russian soul--they are supposedly too cool, detached, and efficient. Yet this charge can be turned around to say that the Emersons make Shostakovich sound more modern by removing a layer of sentiment. It's really up to the listener to decide, yet I found that cool detachment is not prevalent here--not by any means--and the reviewer below who thinks that the tempos are uniformly too fast is not aware of the field; the Emersons are not extreme in their allegros, at least not very often, and when they play a movement for virtuosic speed, it's almost alwaays to good effect.
I bbught this set because I heard the Emersons play Shostakovich in concert on two occasions, and I was deeply struck by how much better these quartets sound when they are given superlative musicianship. I am not one to believe that Shostakovich was a great master of quartet writing compared to Bartok, Schoenberg, and Janacek among moderns. But he found an idiom, often spare and therefore one-dimenisonal, that is easy to absorb. The Emersons go a step further and give that spare idiom all kinds of shading and colors that often make it sound better than it is.
In sum, I did what many collectors befoe me have done. I gave away the Fitzwilliam set, which was a good stop gap for many years, and relish the Emerson set as a great achievement, especially for a non-Russian ensemble.
A triumph of creativity over censorship.......2006-01-22
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Dvorák: The String Quartets
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00002DEH4 Release Date: 2000-10-10 |
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 1 In A Major, Op. 2 B. 2: Andante - Allegro
- String Quartet No. 1 In A Major, Op. 2 B. 2: Adagio affettuoso ed appassionato
- String Quartet No. 1 In A Major, Op. 2 B. 2: Allegro schezando - trio
- Finale - Allegro animato
- In A minor: Quartet Movement: Andante appassionato
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 2 In B Flat Major, B. 17: Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 2 In B Flat Major, B. 17: Largo
- String Quartet No. 2 In B Flat Major, B. 17: Allegro con brio
- String Quartet No. 2 In B Flat Major, B. 17: Finale: Andante
- 2 Waltzes, Op. 54 B. 105: Moderato
- 2 Waltzes, Op. 54 B. 105: Allegro vivace
- String Quartet In F Major, B. 120 (Fragment): Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 3 In D Major, B. 18: Allegro con brio
- String Quartet No. 3 In D Major, B. 18: Andantino
- String Quartet No. 3 In D Major, B. 18: Allegro energico - Trio
- String Quartet No. 3 In D Major, B. 18: Finale: Allegretto
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 4 In E Minor, B. 19: Velmi pohyblive a razne (Assai con moto ed energico)
- String Quartet No. 4 In E Minor, B. 19: Andante religioso - attacca
- String Quartet No. 4 In E Minor, B. 19: Allegro con brio
- String Quartet No. 5 In F Minor, Op. 9 B. 37: Moderato
- String Quartet No. 5 In F Minor, Op. 9 B. 37: Andante con moto quasi allegretto
- String Quartet No. 5 In F Minor, Op. 9 B. 37: Tempo di valse
- String Quartet No. 5 In F Minor, Op. 9 B. 37: Finale - Allegro molto
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 6 In A Minor, Op. 12 B. 40: Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 6 In A Minor, Op. 12 B. 40: Poco allegro
- String Quartet No. 6 In A Minor, Op. 12 B. 40: Poco adagio
- String Quartet No. 6 In A Minor, Op. 12 B. 40: Finale - allegro molto
- String Quartet No. 7 In A Minor, OP. 16 B. 45: Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 7 In A Minor, OP. 16 B. 45: Andante cantabile
- String Quartet No. 7 In A Minor, OP. 16 B. 45: Allegro scherzando - Trio
- String Quartet No. 7 In A Minor, OP. 16 B. 45: Allegro ma non troppo
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 8 In E Major, Op. 80 B. 57: Allegro
- String Quartet No. 8 In E Major, Op. 80 B. 57: Andante con moto
- String Quartet No. 8 In E Major, Op. 80 B. 57: Allegro scherzando
- String Quartet No. 8 In E Major, Op. 80 B. 57: Finale - Allegro con brio
- String Quartet No. 9 In D Minor, Op. 34 B.75: Allegro
- String Quartet No. 9 In D Minor, Op. 34 B.75: Alla polka: Allgretto scherzando - Trio: quasi l'istesso temo
- String Quartet No. 9 In D Minor, Op. 34 B.75: Adagio
- String Quartet No. 9 In D Minor, Op. 34 B.75: Finale - Poco allegro
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 10 In E Flat Major, Op. 51 B. 92: Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 10 In E Flat Major, Op. 51 B. 92: Dumka (Elegia): Andante con moto - Vivace
- String Quartet No. 10 In E Flat Major, Op. 51 B. 92: Romanza: Andante con moto
- String Quartet No. 10 In E Flat Major, Op. 51 B. 92: Finale - Allegro assai
- String Quartet No. 11 In C Major, Op. 61 B. 121: Allegro
- String Quartet No. 11 In C Major, Op. 61 B. 121: Poco adagio e molto cantabile
- String Quartet No. 11 In C Major, Op. 61 B. 121: Scherzo: Allegro vivo - Trio: L'istess tempo
- String Quartet No. 11 In C Major, Op. 61 B. 121: Finale - Vivace
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 12 In F Major, Op. 96 B. 179: Allegro ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 12 In F Major, Op. 96 B. 179: Lento
- String Quartet No. 12 In F Major, Op. 96 B. 179: Molto vivace
- String Quartet No. 12 In F Major, Op. 96 B. 179: Finale: Vivace ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 13 In G Major, Op.106 B. 192: Allegro moderato
- String Quartet No. 13 In G Major, Op.106 B. 192: Adagio ma non troppo
- String Quartet No. 13 In G Major, Op.106 B. 192: Molto vivace
- String Quartet No. 13 In G Major, Op.106 B. 192: Finale: Andante sostenuto - Allegro con fuoco
Tracks:
- String Quartet No. 14 In A Flat Major, Op. 105 No. 193: Adagio ma non troppo - Allegro appassionato
- String Quartet No. 14 In A Flat Major, Op. 105 No. 193: Molto vivance
- String Quartet No. 14 In A Flat Major, Op. 105 No. 193: Lento e molto cantabile
- String Quartet No. 14 In A Flat Major, Op. 105 No. 193: Allegro non tanto
- Cypresses, B. 152: Moderato
- Cypresses, B. 152: Allegro ma non troppo
- Cypresses, B. 152: Andante con moto
- Cypresses, B. 152: Poco Adagio
- Cypresses, B. 152: Andante
- Cypresses, B. 152: Andante moderato
- Cypresses, B. 152: Andante con moto
- Cypresses, B. 152: Lento
- Cypresses, B. 152: Moderato
- Cypresses, B. 152: Andante maestoso
- Cypresses, B. 152: Allegro scherzando
- Cypresses, B. 152: Allegro animato
Customer Reviews:
Brilliant music, excellent performances.......2006-10-11
These are simply some of the finest string quartets ever written. Lyrical and inventive, they will make you understand why Brahms and Dvorak were such good friends and admired each other's work so much. There are other recordings out there of various quartets, particularly the late ones. But the value in having a complete set is that you get to hear the composer's development, and you get to hear infrequently played yet brilliant works. A good example is the Quartet No. 5, which is intense --- as full of bite as, say, "Death and the Maiden," yet as richly melodic as anything Dvorak ever wrote. The recording is clean and warm, the playing precise yet soulful. The set is now selling for about $12 more than I paid for it, but it's still a bargain. You will never regret having bought it.
Dvorak.......2006-05-16
A little cold.......2006-01-16
Music to get your blood flowing!.......2005-11-24
The finest readings I have heard of these quartets.......2005-11-04
Overall, the sound seems a bit better in this re-release than in the previous version available on CD. Not much better, but better. And at this price, it is an absolute steal. Highly recommended for lovers of chamber music, or Dvorak in general.
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