Originally posted by Stanley Stewart
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A delightful, humorous, self-deprecatory literary stylist. I loved this, talking about recording Op.127:
Towards the end of the session Andrew [Keener, producer] zeroed in on a few moments of bad ensemble and intonation that had eluded us so far, using tact and a few tricks to help us play to a higher level. "The way that E flat floats through the air is a bit flat" was a skilful way to avoid blaming a player: the note had doubtless been perfectly in tune when it left my violin, only to be tainted by impurities en route"
But - -
The turn of the century was a questionable time to consider recording yet another cycle of Beethoven quartets to add to the wonderful interpretations by the Amadeus, Hungarian, Budapest, Alban Berg, Cleveland, Tokyo, Guarneri, Julliard and Emerson quartets, to name but a few.
Married to the Amadeus, written by Muriel Nissel, I found a turgid read, with little or no musical insight along the way - a family reminiscence, little more. She has a talent for stating the bleedin' obvious - take this, on p. 64:
Instruments in a quartet must to some degree match each other. If one has a tone that is much superior to the others, the balance can fall apart
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