Originally posted by Pulcinella
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BaL 15.04.23 - Janácek: String Quartet No 1, “Kreutzer Sonata”
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostThe Janacek Qt. record imprinted me as to how it should go. You are right in that it sounds fierce, probably why the other recordings never quite gained my favor. My hiatus from the piece may be a chance to reboot how I think it should go, so I’ll start with other recordings
I wish we had Interpretations on record instead (though that's what we get here, of course).
Listened to the Janacek Quartet yesterday to remind me of that early encounter.
Haven't revisited the Gabrielis yet, but so far today it's been
Quartetto Energie Nove
Hagen Quartett
Quatuor Diotima
All vastly different, so I need to dig the score out too, and see quite how that can be.
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It is difficult, at least for me, to consider the KS In isolation, since it is so frequently coupled with the Second Quartet. I listened to the Mandelrings on a SACD from Audite. I think the selling point of this disc is that it has two versions of Intimate Letters, one featuring Viola D’amore. I am only familiar with that instrument in Vivaldi Concertos. If I didn’t know that it had been used I would have thought it was a slightly higher sounding and slightly less resonant viola. The different versions also have different tempos, particularly in the polka-esque rhythms, and it’s those interpretive choices that stood out to me more than the changes in instruments.
Back to the KS, the Mandelrings are febrile with restraint and lyrical by turns as fits the novella that inspired the work, with the dam bursting at the end as the violence and passion reaches it’s apotheosis. The conclusion is that more shattering because of the passion barely held in check that precedes.
The recording, particularly the DSD layer, is superb. The soundstage is huge, with instruments seeming to emerge at times from several outside my speakers.
I won’t lay claim that this is the greatest recording of the Janacek Quartets ever, but this is a special disc that I must have played once while distracted and then filed away, and will now return to often.
My bias is that Czech musicians reign supreme in the Janacek Quartets, and tonight hopefully will get to one of those ensembles tonight
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I listened to the Mandelrings today. It's very well recorded to be sure. I find on the other hand that their vibrato is a bit much in the louder passages. I like the idea of doing both versions of the 2nd quartet but the Diotimas do this too. Now listening to the Janáčeks for the first time. The first movement is surprisingly slow compared to all the others I've heard, and the balance between voices in the second movement is often quite different from the other recordings I've heard, but the way they do everything seems to have a "rightness" about it which probably plays into the idea that, as you say, "Czech musicians reign supreme". Personally I tend to want to question assumptions of that kind, but in these pieces there seems to be something to them!
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI listened to the Mandelrings today. It's very well recorded to be sure. I find on the other hand that their vibrato is a bit much in the louder passages. I like the idea of doing both versions of the 2nd quartet but the Diotimas do this too. Now listening to the Janáčeks for the first time. The first movement is surprisingly slow compared to all the others I've heard, and the balance between voices in the second movement is often quite different from the other recordings I've heard, but the way they do everything seems to have a "rightness" about it which probably plays into the idea that, as you say, "Czech musicians reign supreme". Personally I tend to want to question assumptions of that kind, but in these pieces there seems to be something to them!
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostI listened to the Mandelrings today. It's very well recorded to be sure. I find on the other hand that their vibrato is a bit much in the louder passages. I like the idea of doing both versions of the 2nd quartet but the Diotimas do this too. Now listening to the Janáčeks for the first time. The first movement is surprisingly slow compared to all the others I've heard, and the balance between voices in the second movement is often quite different from the other recordings I've heard, but the way they do everything seems to have a "rightness" about it which probably plays into the idea that, as you say, "Czech musicians reign supreme". Personally I tend to want to question assumptions of that kind, but in these pieces there seems to be something to them!
I am saving the Janaceks for last in my little survey. Today it was the Smetenas on Denon. This is an early digital recording and sounds it, with a glassy, glaring treble , and there is a lot of treble in these works. The performance, on the other hand, seems to have a “rightness” about it. It is at a lower temperature than the Mandelrings, and the phrasing seems more idiomatic, feeding into my bias that Czech musicians have an advantage here. I think the Pavel Haas will blow the doors off them in virtuosity, but this not lacking in passion.
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On commercial CDs here are, in alphabetical order of performers' names:
Belcea Qt
Britten Qt
Quatuor Diotima
Gabrielli Qt
Janacek Qt
New Helsinki Qt
Mandelring Qt
Pavel Haas Qt
Talich Qt
The Britten Qt and New Helsinki Qt I find the least engaging. The others all offer something or other special, I feel.
There are several others saved from broadcasts, and I intend to stream the Hagen Qt and Smetana Qt, later today.
[Ah, just found a CD-R of an 8th July 1998 concert broadcast from the Pitville Pump Room of the Lindsays playing Kurtag's Pfficium Brve, Op. 8; Janachel's Kreutzer Sonata Quartet; and Beethoven's Op. 59/2. It seems to have survived the ravages of time.]
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I have just remembered that the June 2022 BBC MM CD (Vol 30, No 9) features a performance by the Pavel Haas Quartet, recorded at the Bath International Festival on 18 June 2009.
I need to compare that performance with their earlier (recorded June/July 2007) commercially released Supraphon one.Last edited by Pulcinella; 05-04-23, 06:33. Reason: Recording details amended, as per Bryn's post; I'd misread the tracks!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI have just remembered that the June 2022 BBC MM CD (Vol 30, No 9) features a performance by the Pavel Haas Quartet, recorded live (sic) at LSO St Luke's, London, 8 November 2011.
Wow! What a well-filled disc: 83'35". The Janacek and the Dvorak Op. 106 date from the June 2009 Bath International Festival, the Dvorak 'American' from November 2011 (LSO St Luke's).
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostGood point. That's another I have, tucked away somewhere.
Wow! What a well-filled disc: 83'35". The Janacek and the Dvorak Op. 106 date from the June 2009 Bath International Festival, the Dvorak 'American' from November 2011 (LSO St Luke's).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostYes: it comes with a warning that it might not play on all players. I misread the tracks when I said it was from St Lukes in 2011! I'll correct my post.
Oh, the Dvorak and Janacek string quartet cover disc is playing here now.
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The bad news: with so many excellent versions of Janacek's 1st String Quartet to choose from, covering such an unusually wide variety of interpretations, choosing a short list for BaL is bound to be contentious.
The good news: with Erik Levi at the helm, we have a good broadcaster of huge intelligence, articulacy and discriminating judgement.
My own choice: it would have to be one of the Czech versions, not one of the streamlined 'international' readings which forget that this music was written to sound on the edge - both emotionally, and at the physical limits of what's playable. Aside from the Smetana Quartet and Janacek Quartet (unavoidable classics), from slightly more modern versions I always greatly enjoy revisiting the Škampa Quartet (2002, Supraphon) who can be a mite fierce for some tastes. Not for me: I love their willingness to conjure up eerie sounds, from strange places on their strings. There is nothing sentimental about this performance.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View Postit would have to be one of the Czech versions, not one of the streamlined 'international' readings which forget that this music was written to sound on the edge - both emotionally, and at the physical limits of what's playable.Last edited by RichardB; 05-04-23, 10:33.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostThe bad news: with so many excellent versions of Janacek's 1st String Quartet to choose from, covering such an unusually wide variety of interpretations, choosing a short list for BaL is bound to be contentious.
The good news: with Erik Levi at the helm, we have a good broadcaster of huge intelligence, articulacy and discriminating judgement.
My own choice: it would have to be one of the Czech versions, not one of the streamlined 'international' readings which forget that this music was written to sound on the edge - both emotionally, and at the physical limits of what's playable. Aside from the Smetana Quartet and Janacek Quartet (unavoidable classics), from slightly more modern versions I always greatly enjoy revisiting the Škampa Quartet (2002, Supraphon) who can be a mite fierce for some tastes. Not for me: I love their willingness to conjure up eerie sounds, from strange places on their strings. There is nothing sentimental about this performance.
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