I’ve very much enjoyed the newish recordings from the Cuarteto Casals.
Beethoven String Quartets on record
Collapse
X
-
For the past week or so, when I haven't been actually listening to anything I've had op.132 on repeat in my head, not from start to finish but always beginning again from some random point and continuing from there until something else gets my attention, almost as if it's going on all the time and I can only hear it when nothing else is going on. At various points I've thought, I really ought to just listen to it now. But not yet.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by RichardB View PostFor the past week or so, when I haven't been actually listening to anything I've had op.132 on repeat in my head, not from start to finish but always beginning again from some random point and continuing from there until something else gets my attention, almost as if it's going on all the time and I can only hear it when nothing else is going on. At various points I've thought, I really ought to just listen to it now. But not yet.
Come to think of it, you might already know the late quartets in these recordings from their earlier, separate, issue. These, however, have been newly remastered from the original 'tapes'.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostCome to think of it, you might already know the late quartets in these recordings from their earlier, separate, issue. These, however, have been newly remastered from the original 'tapes'.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by RichardB View PostI've ended up listening to the A minor quartet four times since yesterday.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by french frank View PostNever hoped to find something on which we think alike! I still go for the Quartetto Italiano.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bryn View PostFrom the 1960s onwards, they were my "go-to" for the Beethoven String Quartets. I still love their survey but have since got more to appreciate other, more HIPP, approaches by the likes of the Mosaïques, Eroica and Chiaroscuros.
Comment
-
-
All borrowed LPs here initally.
First the Italianos, but once I'd staggered home with the Complete, slightly dog-eared Box of the Vegh Stereo.... that was it. They weren't in great condition and the noise often tried my patience but I knew they were special; they reached deeper and sang more intimately. After Hans Keller's 1970s talks on the Late Quartets, OP.130 especially, I OD'd on them and had to keep away for some years. I went backwards through the Op.59s, (Simpson talks, Italiano LPs) but usually heard this canon on R3 relays.
Latterly, after many borrowed and bought sets and samples, broadcasts and webcasts, my current go-to is the 1952 Veghs (lovely Music & Arts boxset, excellent remaster). Particularly as I tend to play Op.18 much more now, and the earlier Vegh set is very good in those. But I'll be checking out the Chiaroscuros soon.
But Op.130 (that ethereal development in the 1st movement is often in my head) remains very special to me (along with 135 "Must it be? It must be!": a wonderfully deft and subtle work which wears its profundity lightly.).
I may be in a minority here, but I came to prefer the shorter dance-rondo-finale for the complete Op.130, with Op.133 as a separate experience....
I recall Simpson once, mischievous as ever, suggested playing Op.130 as a 7-movement work, with the dance finale last....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAll borrowed LPs here initally.
First the Italianos, but once I'd staggered home with the Complete, slightly dog-eared Box of the Vegh Stereo.... that was it. They weren't in great condition and the noise often tried my patience but I knew they were special; they reached deeper and sang more intimately. After Hans Keller's 1970s talks on the Late Quartets, OP.130 especially, I OD'd on them and had to keep away for some years. I went backwards through the Op.59s, (Simpson talks, Italiano LPs) but usually heard this canon on R3 relays.
Latterly, after many borrowed and bought sets and samples, broadcasts and webcasts, my current go-to is the 1952 Veghs (lovely Music & Arts boxset, excellent remaster). Particularly as I tend to play Op.18 much more now, and the earlier Vegh set is very good in those. But I'll be checking out the Chiaroscuros soon.
But Op.130 (that ethereal development in the 1st movement is often in my head) remains very special to me (along with 135 "Must it be? It must be!": a wonderfully deft and subtle work which wears its profundity lightly.).
I may be in a minority here, but I came to prefer the shorter dance-rondo-finale for the complete Op.130, with Op.133 as a separate experience....
I recall Simpson once, mischievous as ever, suggested playing Op.130 as a 7-movement work, with the dance finale last....
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Joseph K View PostI'm sure there are many of us round here who like Beethoven.
... except for Serial Apologist...
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostOh no! - I really love the "late quartets", and the two sets of piano variations. It's the "middle period" works I'm less enamelled of: probably as a consequence of over-exposure by my Beethoven-fanatical father in my childhood. I'm one of those evasive unprincipled people who tend to prefer what later composers have "done" with some of the more radical aspects of the music of the greats - Schoenberg or Bartok with the "late" Beethoven quartets; Balakirev, Rimsky-Korsakov, Scriabin or Busoni with Liszt - to cite two examples.
I'm fond of all of Beethoven (absolutely no chance of OD-ing on his or any other classical composer's music in my youth ).
I'm particularly fond of op.127 of the Late Quartets and indeed of Beethoven's whole oeuvre.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm one of those evasive unprincipled people who tend to prefer what later composers have "done" with some of the more radical aspects of the music of the greats
Comment
-
Comment