Originally posted by Bryn
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Tippett, Michael Kemp (1905 - 98)
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostThe live Wigmore Hall set by the Heath Quartet is very fine indeed!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI have the recording by the Lindsays. As recommended by kea, I've started with no.4. I'm not sure I could imagine it played much better than this, it comes over as a highly sonorous and timbrally varied piece and I like the minimal use of vibrato.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostNever mind the intonation, feel the width, eh?
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI don't understand the received opinion in some quarters that Peter Cropper played out of tune.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI wasn't aware of this received opinion. Listening to the 3rd and 4th quartets today I noticed one or two very minor intonation "issues" in some of the more difficult moments, but nothing that reduced my appreciation of the performances.
To rephrase that, I'm usually tolerant of slightly innovative re-tuningsI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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I used to own a volume of their second (digital) Beethoven series—containing Op.132 and Op.104—where I greatly appreciated their interpretive direction but did find the playing ugly in terms of intonation—and had similar problems with a recording of the two Janáček quartets which I also no longer retain for that reason, and with their late Schubert, which I do retain anyway for its depth of feeling. Have never had any issues with their Tippett set though, or their Bartók.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostHere's a link to the Gramophone review of the ASV (re)issue of the full set of quartets played by the Lindsays:
https://www.gramophone.co.uk/review/...ing-quartets-0
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Going offtopic a bit, what I'm wondering (as someone who's never knowingly listened to the Lindsays playing anything at all before now) is how they managed to gain such a strong reputation and make so many recordings, some of which (Beethoven!) won Gramophone Awards and the like, when there was, as LMP puts it, a "well-circulated opinion" that something as basic as their intonation was defective. Is this because there were other aspects of their interpretations that outweighed such problems? I've had a chance now to listen a couple of times to both the Heaths and the Lindsays playing Tippett no.4 and my impression is that the former are way behind in terms of ensemble (especially), of sonic, dynamic and dramatic variety, and the Heaths like many quartets sidestep issues of intonation by spreading their pitches out with vibrato. I'm also surprised that the Heaths' Tippett recording has received so many accolades when to me it's clear that the Lindsays inhabit these pieces (I'm talking about nos. 4 and 5, I haven't heard the others yet) so much more completely.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe late Michael Oliver was not known for getting things wrong...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostGoing offtopic a bit, what I'm wondering (as someone who's never knowingly listened to the Lindsays playing anything at all before now) is how they managed to gain such a strong reputation and make so many recordings, some of which (Beethoven!) won Gramophone Awards and the like, when there was, as LMP puts it, a "well-circulated opinion" that something as basic as their intonation was defective. Is this because there were other aspects of their interpretations that outweighed such problems? I've had a chance now to listen a couple of times to both the Heaths and the Lindsays playing Tippett no.4 and my impression is that the former are way behind in terms of ensemble (especially), of sonic, dynamic and dramatic variety, and the Heaths like many quartets sidestep issues of intonation by spreading their pitches out with vibrato. I'm also surprised that the Heaths' Tippett recording has received so many accolades when to me it's clear that the Lindsays inhabit these pieces (I'm talking about nos. 4 and 5, I haven't heard the others yet) so much more completely.
I'm going to have to listen to these again now, in both versions!
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