BaL 21.01.17 - Beethoven: String Quartet no. 12 in E flat, Op. 127
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I have a feeling that Op127 is the Cinderella of the late quartets. Why? Possibly because 130, 131 and 132 are clearly 'complete 2nd half' works in a concert, but 127 is a bit too short to take that spot on its own. It could I suppose be part or all of a 1st half, but that somehow seems disrespectful! Anyway, after 40+ years of concert-going I caught it live for the very first time only in 2014. (Yes, I confess, I've yet to tackle a complete cycle)
On disc I too stated with the Hungarians' HMV bargain-box c1973 for 127. Since then, the Italians, the Takacs and the Lindsays have been added (complete sets of just the late quartets for the Is and the Ts). The Lindsay perdormance came as a gift in this 'Resonance' box set but there are no recording dates that I can see. Are they the same recordings as appeared on HMV-shop twofers with ASV 'P' dates of 1987?
I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostAs far as I know, we are still waiting for a period performance of the late Beethoven quartets.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post... the Lindsays have been added (complete sets of just the late quartets for the Is and the Ts). The Lindsay perdormance came as a gift in this 'Resonance' box set but there are no recording dates that I can see. Are they the same recordings as appeared on HMV-shop twofers with ASV 'P' dates of 1987?
(Pedants corner: When they recorded it, they were the Lindsay String Quartet. By the time they recorded it again, they were Lindsays.)
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Originally posted by verismissimo View Post(Pedants corner: When they recorded it, they were the Lindsay String Quartet. By the time they recorded it again, they were Lindsays.)
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostA bit of an inappropriate name anyway. They named themselves as a string quartet (which they were) in honour of Lord Lindsay, founder of Keele University, where the quartet was in residence for 14 years. Then they moved on to Sheffield and Manchester, calling themselves "The Lindsays" (which they never were) until they disbanded. Ironically, Peter Cropper was the only player to last out the full 39 years of the quartet, so it might have been more apt to have stuck with their original name - the Cropper Quartet.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBy the same token, was the Amadeus S4tet also not "inappropriately name[d]", or the Aeolians, or the Alban Bergs, or the Diotimas, or the Fitzwilliams? An ensemble can call itself whatever it wishes, can it not ... the Lindsays, the Shirleys, the Beverleys, the Kimberleys ... entirely up to them? If they chose to honour somebody who founded a University, in what sense is it "inappropriate"?
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