Interesting discussion on Music Matters about the new film A Late Quartet:
A fascinating subject, the truth often stranger than any fiction. I didn't realise the Amadeus got separate cars to separate hotels. Rostislav Dubinsky's account of his years as founder member of the Borodins in post-Stalinist Russia is terrifying in places. There's a cryptic reference to the private lives of the Quartetto Italiano in "An Equal Music" which I've not seen mentioned elsewhere.
Is anyone aware of any other published quartet "biographies"?
It's on Sky Box Office right now.
This weekend A Late Quartet, a film written and directed by Israeli-American Yaron Zilberman, opens in the UK. Starring Christopher Walken, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Catherine Keener and Mark Ivanir it tells the story of the fictional Fugue Quartet who are thrown into crisis after 25 years performing together when their cellist and father figure Peter (played by Walken) announces his catastrophic diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. As the quartet faces its future without him tensions rise and the player’s personal relationships are severely tested.
Tom is joined by Eugene Drucker, violinist in the Emerson Quartet whose own cellist leaves this year after three decades together, and Laura Samuel co-founder of the Belcea Quartet, to review the film and discuss the unique nature of life in a string quartet.
Tom is joined by Eugene Drucker, violinist in the Emerson Quartet whose own cellist leaves this year after three decades together, and Laura Samuel co-founder of the Belcea Quartet, to review the film and discuss the unique nature of life in a string quartet.
Is anyone aware of any other published quartet "biographies"?
It's on Sky Box Office right now.
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