Anyway, what are your favourites?
andy
If you're looking for fresh, check out Quatuor Ebene on Virgin.
Juilliard Quartet, RCA Victor.
TD
Carmina Quartet, Denon. (Not available of course ;-( )
AFAIK this has been re-issued by Brilliant as a twofer with piano trios.
Johannes
You're right. I have never seen this.
http://records.joanrecords.com/epages/joan.storefront/EN/Product/8200
I've been listening to bleeding chunks on amazon, and I do like
Quatuor Ebene - nice, very good pizz
Belcea Qt - light and atmospheric, maybe lacks a bit of character
Emerson - very impressive
Vlach - really good
Parkany Qt (Praga) - interesting - a contender, has character SACD
????
Talich - haven't heard
Hollywood - haven't heard
Guarneri - only heard a short clip
Leipzig - good in the Debussy but no Ravel (Faure etc)
Berg - certainly very good but not sure it's a keeper. Much nervous
energy, restless
Aurelia Saxophone Qt - I'm speechless....
Not so keen on
Tokyo - impressive playing but don't feel they get to the heart of the
music
Hagen - too sweet
Cleveland - lovely ensemble but bland
Juillard - very good but not quite my taste
Budapest - also very good but looking for something different
Italian - too emphatic
Borodin - not my taste
St Petersburg - generic
Kodaly - generic
Lindsays - generic
Keller - bit fast and slick, and slow bits drag
Stuyvesant - sound too dim, but not a great one
Capet - a little disappointing from such a good ensemble, and sound
clear but dated
Camina - musical flow sounds strangely disconnected
Paris Opera Qt - like their approach but not everything they do
Where do I go from here? All this is based on excepts. Also what's the
Talich and Hollywood like
Maybe you should give up. Nothing seems to be good enough.
BTW what do you mean by "generic"?
http://www.cdjapan.co.jp/detailview.html?KEY=COCO-70518
Bob Harper
Also more conveniently from the iTunes store:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=277138506&s=143441
In case you were worried, the product description helpfully reassures
us that the lyrics are clean.
Two favorites:
- Melos Quartett on DG
- Ébène Quartet on Virgin Classics (Debussy, Ravel and Fauré Quartets)
> Anyway, what are your favourites?
Galimir on Vanguard, which is not only a beautiful performance but has
excellent sound (except for a very small dropout at the beginning of
the second movement which must have been a flaw in the mastering for
CD or the result of deterioration of the analog master tape). The
Emerson is...efficient :(
Incidentally, my vote also goes to the early Juilliard Quartet
recording that Tom mentioned, now on Testament, though I don't
actually own any others.
> Incidentally, my vote also goes to the early Juilliard Quartet
> recording that Tom mentioned, now on Testament, though I don't
> actually own any others.
Yes, a great performance. Also like the Ebene SQ that others have
mentioned.
Simon
I don't know. After all, both composers could write pretty sensuous
music, and we all know that sensuous somehow means dirty. Right?
Bob Harper
Yes, absolutely. Their French SQ performances feature the same fresh sound and
terchnical command that make their Haydn so rewarding. The opening of the Ravel
is pure magic. Best of all, the Ravel/Debussy pairing is accompanied by a
superlative performance of Faure's wonderful but elusive String Quartet. If you
like the Vlach Ravel/Debussy (also on the lean side, sonority-wise), I suspect you
will enjoy the Ebene at least as much. The Vlach recording, btw, was reissued in
the Supraphon Archive series at midprice several years ago, but it may be op now.
AC
I've ordered the Ebene and the Belcea. I wouldn't mind ordering the
Vlach - I'll have to look for a cheap copy - listed at some high
prices on Amazon. The Melos has been much recommended so I'll look out
for that too.
andy
The Melos is out-of-catalogue, but it is available as digital download
at the DG Store (320 k)
Perhaps too middle-of-the-road, but I love the ensemble--four matched
Strads once owned by Paganini--to describe it as "bland"!
> On Jun 7, 7:14�am, Andy Evans <performanceandme...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> If you're looking for fresh, check out Quatuor Ebene on Virgin.
>>
>> I've been listening to �bleeding chunks on amazon, and I do like
>> Quatuor Ebene - nice, very good pizz
>> Belcea Qt - light and atmospheric, maybe lacks a bit of character
>> Emerson - very impressive
>> Vlach - really good
>> Parkany Qt (Praga) - interesting - a contender, has character SACD
>>
>> ????
>> Talich - haven't heard
>> Hollywood - haven't heard
>> Guarneri - only heard a short clip
>> Leipzig - good in the Debussy but no Ravel (Faure etc)
>> Berg - certainly very good but not sure it's a keeper. Much nervous
>> energy, restless
>> Aurelia Saxophone Qt - I'm speechless....
>>
>> Not so keen on
>> Tokyo - impressive playing but don't feel they get to the heart of the
>> music
>> Hagen - too sweet
>> Cleveland - lovely ensemble but bland
>
> Perhaps too middle-of-the-road, but I love the ensemble--four matched
> Strads once owned by Paganini--to describe it as "bland"!
Sometimes there is no accounting for ignorance, or taste.
TD
> Anyway, what are your favourites?
New Zealand String Quartet (atoll)
Tom Wood
"Tom Deacon" <tomd...@mac.com> wrote in message
news:2009060704582643042-tomdeacon@maccom...
> I was going to say that. Actually, those are hardy pieces -- hard to
> really play badly.
So are the Bloch quartets, particularly as recorded on Laurel.
--
Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/index.html
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To write to me, do for my address what Androcles did for the lion
Opinions expressed here are not necessarily those of my employers
Parrenin Qt,
Quartetto Italiano
Richard
-Larry
> On Jun 8, 4:12�pm, Richard <richard.simn...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Jun 7, 9:58�pm, "Thomas Wood" <woodtj1...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>> I was going to say that. Actually, those are hardy pieces -- hard to re
> ally
>>> play badly.
>>
>>> Tom Wood
>>
>>> "Tom Deacon" <tomdea...@mac.com> wrote in message
>>
>>> news:2009060704582643042-tomdeacon@maccom...
>>
>>>> On 2009-06-06 21:05:12 -0400, Andy Evans <performanceandme...@gmail.c
> om>
>>>> said:
>>
>>>>> I'm probably due for a fresh performance of these works. I heard
>>>>> excerpts from the Belcea Qt which sounded nice. Hagen is a bit syrup
> y,
> I am much more fond of the 1928 Capet Quartet's recording than Andy
> Evans is. Yes, it sounds very primitive next to a modern SACD, but
> they bring such a sense of tradition to their playing - especially the
> slow movement, which is glorious - that I can't stop listening to
> them. The similarly-named Calvet Quartet made a recording of the work
> in 1931. Again, the sound is primitive (though much better than the
> Capet), but they play the work in a way one just doesn't hear in
> concert today. It is definitely worth a listen.
>
> -Larry
They are, indeed. Mainly for the style, which seems rather
old-fashioned today, I think. Sound questions aside, as you say.
But the Juilliard Quartet's version, which sounds best perhaps on an
original LP in pristine condition, but which sounds OK (shows what
happens when engineers try to restore a tape they know nothing about, I
think) if not fabulous. The Juilliard Quartet was in its absolute prime
at that time, however. And it is a real treat to hear this music played
with every little note in tune and together and sounding like a real
string quartet. No effort is required to bring these four musicians
alive in your living room.
This can be said of other recordings, of course, and perhaps more so
with more modern recordings, but none of them have the sheen of the
Juilliards. No not even the Quartetto Italiano, I would say in all
honesty, despite my fondness for that recording too.
TD
You're speaking of the RCA Juilliard? I agree it's remarkable -- but the
early recording they did for Columbia I like even better (the Debussy
portion). The Krosnick-era Juilliards also did one, early '90s.
The fierceness of both early Juilliard recordings makes them a bit outr�
for me, galvanic though they are.
> This can be said of other recordings, of course, and perhaps more so
> with more modern recordings, but none of them have the sheen of the
> Juilliards. No not even the Quartetto Italiano, I would say in all
> honesty, despite my fondness for that recording too.
(Again there are two, EMI and Philips.)
In the Debussy, the Emerson Quartet is a definite contender, with
strangely enough, a slightly more Gallic feel than either the, er,
Quartetto Italiano; or the -- Alban Berg; or the Juilliard. Each of
which is a keeper.
The Paganini Quartet did the Debussy twice; I only know the less famous
one. It would be good to hear the other sometime.
SE.
> I am much more fond of the 1928 Capet Quartet's recording than Andy
> Evans is. Yes, it sounds very primitive next to a modern SACD, but
> they bring such a sense of tradition to their playing - especially the
> slow movement, which is glorious - that I can't stop listening to
> them. The similarly-named Calvet Quartet made a recording of the work
> in 1931. Again, the sound is primitive (though much better than the
> Capet), but they play the work in a way one just doesn't hear in
> concert today. It is definitely worth a listen.
Hi Larry,
(I have the hardest time separating the Calvets and the Capets in what's
left of my brain. The Lord Calvert, however, I can distinguish.)
Are there any others by French quartets that we should know? I think
Benoit might have uploaded a Loewenguth awhile back.... And the Ebene
has drawn praise.
Anybody heard the recently released Ysaye Qtt disc? (Debussy, Faur�,
Stravinsky.) This ensemble is, IMO, first-rate.
SE.
Yes, indeed.
I have all those QI recordings on the original Angel issues. I suppose
they have been reissued on Testament? I haven't checked. but the LP
issues are quite rare, Steve and not widely known.
The Philips issue is the one most people refer to, of course, when they
speak of their interpretation.
TD
FWW, this July 30 the Ebene Quartet will play the Ravel, Debussy, and
Faure Op.121 quartets in one recital at the 2009 Verbier Festival.
Hope that is one they televise on medici.tv.
Rugby
>
> In the Debussy, the Emerson Quartet is a definite contender, with
> strangely enough, a slightly more Gallic feel than either the, er,
> Quartetto Italiano; or the -- Alban Berg; or the Juilliard. Each of
> which is a keeper.
>
> The Paganini Quartet did the Debussy twice; I only know the less famous
> one. It would be good to hear the other sometime.
>
> SE.
I listened to the Fine Arts quartet play them recently (hmm, I mean the
recording). I hadn't heard either piece for several years, and enjoyed
the Debussy quite a lot; the Ravel not so much.
bl
The EMI was reissued in EMI References (ART mastering) -- I would guess
about 2001. The Milhaud quartet they recorded was thrown in. I remember
Marc Perman remarking on it here.
SE.