A welcome In Concert last night with, shock horror, classical composers. "Live" music plus a lovely Beethoven filler. (Why does LvB wind music always cheer me up?)
Mozart and Haydn String Quartets
Radio 3 in Concert
Recorded live at LSO St Luke's in April and May two internationally renowned string quartets, the Norwegian Engegård Quartet and Quatuor Voce from France, play classics of the repertoire by Haydn and Mozart.
Mozart’s String Quartets K 464 and K 465 are the final two of a set of six dedicated to Haydn after Mozart had studied and been deeply impressed by Haydn’s groundbreaking Op. 33 Quartets. The “Dissonance” Quartet got its moniker from its famous bleak opening, where unresolved harmonic clashes sound as each instrument enters.
The “Emperor” Quartet is from Haydn’s last complete set of String Quartets. In the late 1790s the Haydn was acknowledged as Europe’s greatest living composer, father of the String Quartet and the Symphony, with the newly written and hugely popular oratorio The Creation storming the Continent. The Quartet gets its nickname from the tune used in the second movement, a self-quotation of an anthem written for the Austrian emperor Franz II which eventually became the national anthem of Austria-Hungary and then Germany.
Presented by Tom Service.
Mozart: String Quartet in C, K 465 “Dissonance”
Engegård Quartet
Mozart: String Quartet in A, K 464
Haydn: String Quartet No 62 in C, Op 76 No 3 “Emperor”
Quatuor Voce
Radio 3 in Concert
Recorded live at LSO St Luke's in April and May two internationally renowned string quartets, the Norwegian Engegård Quartet and Quatuor Voce from France, play classics of the repertoire by Haydn and Mozart.
Mozart’s String Quartets K 464 and K 465 are the final two of a set of six dedicated to Haydn after Mozart had studied and been deeply impressed by Haydn’s groundbreaking Op. 33 Quartets. The “Dissonance” Quartet got its moniker from its famous bleak opening, where unresolved harmonic clashes sound as each instrument enters.
The “Emperor” Quartet is from Haydn’s last complete set of String Quartets. In the late 1790s the Haydn was acknowledged as Europe’s greatest living composer, father of the String Quartet and the Symphony, with the newly written and hugely popular oratorio The Creation storming the Continent. The Quartet gets its nickname from the tune used in the second movement, a self-quotation of an anthem written for the Austrian emperor Franz II which eventually became the national anthem of Austria-Hungary and then Germany.
Presented by Tom Service.
Mozart: String Quartet in C, K 465 “Dissonance”
Engegård Quartet
Mozart: String Quartet in A, K 464
Haydn: String Quartet No 62 in C, Op 76 No 3 “Emperor”
Quatuor Voce
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