Favorite Classical String Quartets


When I started listening to Classical Music as a teenager over 50 years ago I quickly became seduced by the sounds of a string quartet.  My school library had a Seraphim 3LP set of Beethoven Middle Period Quartets with the Hungarian SQ (this was in stereo; they had recorded them in mono as well).  Op. 59/1, the first of the Razumovsky Quartets, was my seductress:  those long soulful cello lines, with the viola weaving in and out, the violins then sweetly taking over the main themes, and then all the instruments trading places-I was hooked.

 59/3 has a second movement dominated by the cellist who sounds like a jazz walking bass, and that furious fugal finale.  The Harp Quartet in that with its flying pizzicatos was another revelation.

  Beethoven’s late quartets are another thing entirely, and took a few generations for nineteenth century listeners to absorb.  Mozart and Haydn invented the genre and a lot of their best music is in their quartets.

  The aforementioned Classical Period composers are generally thought to have represented the apex of the genre, but I have always been fascinated by Dvorak, Borodin, and Shostakovich, all of whom seemed to luxuriate in the special sonic world of the string quartet.

 

 Other favorites?

  T

mahler123

@bruce19 

 

of course I listen to all genresharmo of chamber music, trios, duos, quintets, whatever.  However all chamber music in one thread I thought to be excessively ambitious

  I love the Haydn Quartets, as they are brimming with invention and humor.  However I like the way that composers that followed in his wake expanded sonority and particularly gave the cello and viola more to do harmonically 

@billstevenson 

 

i don’t want to criticize your purchasing habits, but based on a few posts here it sounds like you are concentrating on being a completist collector, and perhaps not always appreciating what you have collected.  I appreciate that you find anything after the early classical period challenging.  However you claim to have a great deal of Dvorak.  Just do yourself a favor and give a listen to his American Quartet.  If you find that music hard, challenging, whatever then I guess we are so far apart aesthetically as to lack a basis for real dialogue.  I’m not being judgmental, just hoping that you will have an open mind and appreciate something beautiful.

@billsw 

 

I have the original Borodin Shostakovich set, which was first in the States on Melodyia (I have it on Chandos).  This set was set down before the composer had died so it doesn’t contain 14/15.  I also have most of the 1980s set.

  However the set that I truly love is the Fitzwilliam Quartet.

The Quartetto Italiano complete box is a great place to start, and I was delighted to discover many live albums on streaming services 

Let’s not limit ourselves to string quartets Let’s give a little love to the wind players. One of my favorite all-time is the Athena ensemble, sadly long defunct, but available on Chandos. Edward Elgar wrote some great small group pieces that are truly a delight.