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- Newsgroups: rec.music.classical
- Path: sparky!uunet!uunet.ca!canrem!dosgate!dosgate![alexander.inglis@canrem.com]
- From: "alexander inglis" <alexander.inglis@canrem.com>
- Subject: beethoven late string qua
- Message-ID: <199229.4216.26256@dosgate>
- Reply-To: "alexander inglis" <alexander.inglis@canrem.com>
- Organization: Canada Remote Systems
- Distribution: rec
- Date: 29 Dec 92 18:41:37 EST
- Lines: 53
-
- JG>Steve Monroe (v035550@stortek.com) wrote:
- >: I am interested in opinions on recordings of Beethoven's
- >: "late" string quartets.
-
- JG>: Favourites? recordings to avoid, etc.
-
- Here is music equivalent to one of the Seven Wonders of the World. There
- certainly are performances which don't do them justice but I think you'd
- have a hard time finding a professional performance that managed to
- *mask* this music's essence.
-
- I heard the Bartok Quartet in one of these a few seasons back ...
- haven't heard their (now oldish) recordings reissued on Hungaraton but
- I'd expect at a good price you'll encounter highly idiomatic playing.
-
- The Alban Berg Quartet on EMI were celebrated in some circles. I haven't
- heard these recordings but I have found this ensemble a bit thin on
- musical interpretation despite virtuosic talents.
-
- The Amadeus Quartet are often overlooked because they were just around
- for so long. They were outstanding Beethoven players. You might be lucky
- enough to find their whole cycle for not much more than the late cycle
- by a full-priced group.
-
- I'll second the nomination for the Vegh Quartet. Decent notes, too. They
- have a good sense of "brooding" in the moments called for.
-
- Quartetto Italiano are at their best in the late cycle but I've always
- *respected* this set more than *loved* it.
-
- The mono Budapest cycle from the Library of Congress (c 1953), last on
- Odyseey LPs, hasn't made it to CD yet. It will be a *top* contender when
- it does.
-
- And run, don't walk, to any store selling portions of the Busch cycle
- recorded mainly in the mid-30s for EMI (and as late as the mid-40s on
- Columbia). In fact, the Busch are a top drawer recommendation in any
- chamber music from the mainstream Austrian/German repertoire such as
- Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms.
-
- Lastly, for an interesting peek into 19th century performance practice,
- have a look at the Rose Quartet on Biddulph. Recorded in 1927, there is
- one quartet from each of Beethoven's "periods". Formed in 1881, this
- Quartet *premiered* works by Brahms, Schoenberg and others. The notes by
- Tully Porter are fascinating; the sound is quite good for its time. It's
- a much more enlightening "time capsule" than, say, the Busch recordings,
- from the point of view of 19th century interpretations.
-
- Alexander Inglis | InterNet: alexander.inglis@canrem.com
- Toronto, Canada | CompuServe: 70307,20 BIX: ainglis
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