Off topic, i suppose, but i would love to know what @billstevenson thinks of this duo guitar version of Goldberg Variations. https://tidal.com/album/445281988
I am besotted.
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
Off topic, i suppose, but i would love to know what @billstevenson thinks of this duo guitar version of Goldberg Variations. https://tidal.com/album/445281988 I am besotted. |
I can find string trios for the Goldberg Variations with his arrangement but not anything for quartet. did you mean trios? Or can you provide a link for SQ recordings? |
This Tacet recording, for example, i think is very nice: https://tidal.com/album/282879318 |
I too love string quartets. My tastes skew modern so here are some favorites:
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yes the Crawford Seeger work is wonderful. I actually encountered it about 50 years ago on a Nonesuch LP, I think paired with the Barber.
The Kronos discs are interesting ways to push the traditional boundaries of the string quartet. I liked some of them and was put off by a few others.
Beethoven’s late string quartets are wonderful. I particularly love the Op.131 which still sounds modernist today.
Bartok’s corpus fascinate me. I still haven’t come to terms with all of them. The Shostakovich Quartets are in my opinion his finest music, and I say this as a collector of multiple symphony cycles by him |