In the car the other day we turned on the radio and I had the disorienting experience of listening to a piece of music that I knew well but that was being performed with unfamiliar instrumentation. The music was Shostakovich Eighth String Quartet (his best known of the 15) apparently arranged for string orchestra (presumably the Barshai arrangement, but we arrived at our destination before the conclusion and I din't find out).
Some Quartet music sounds better in full astring orchestra guise. Barber's famous Adagio For Strings started as the middle movement of his Quartet and was expanded by the Composer at the behest of Toscanini. The slow movements of the borodin Second and the Tchaikovsky first also gain from such a treatment.
Most of the time such expansion seems to dilute the effect of powerful music, music that in Quartet guise seems to be straining to the limits of the players ability. Here I would place the Shostakovich Quartets, Beethoven (Grosse Fuge, Op. 131), and some Bartok conflations that I have heard.
I understand the desire to bring great music to a wider audience, but most of the time I think it is unsuccessful and diminishes the works.
Some Quartet music sounds better in full astring orchestra guise. Barber's famous Adagio For Strings started as the middle movement of his Quartet and was expanded by the Composer at the behest of Toscanini. The slow movements of the borodin Second and the Tchaikovsky first also gain from such a treatment.
Most of the time such expansion seems to dilute the effect of powerful music, music that in Quartet guise seems to be straining to the limits of the players ability. Here I would place the Shostakovich Quartets, Beethoven (Grosse Fuge, Op. 131), and some Bartok conflations that I have heard.
I understand the desire to bring great music to a wider audience, but most of the time I think it is unsuccessful and diminishes the works.
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