It is reassuring not to be the only A-Gonner who appreciates and enjoys modern and contemporary composed music.
Both of you are knowledgeable and I thank you for the suggestions including several composers I am unfamiliar with. Listening to the sparse and contemplative Fragmente-Stille composed by Luigi Nono right now. Thanks!
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
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Thanks to all for many good suggestions which I have added to my "Listen later" list. Here's a question. Does listening to this type of music tend to drive audiophiles to similarities in choice of equipment? For my part I have gone towards triode tubes and high efficiency speakers, including open baffle and single full range. I also enjoy Pass Firstwatt amps which I have come to think of as solid state tube amps. |
My tastes in classical music, tend toward the avant-garde, atonal, and overall, pretty "thorny" sounding. So, your mileage may definitely vary with my picks. Elliott Carter - Quartets No. 1 (1951) and No. 2 (1959), but all four are all great. Charles Wuorinen - First String Quartet (1971) and Fourth String Quartet (2000) Olga Neuwirth - In the realms of the unreal (2009) Ligeti - String Quartet No 2 |
@kirkwallace Well you certainly enhanced my life! After listening to the guitars, I listened to some Argerich, then some Emerson, then some Gould. Frankly there is no part of any of these Goldberg Variations that I don’t like. Maybe if you pointed a gun at me head it would be Argerich, but I do like the string versions too...both the quartet and the guitars. I can’t choose, it is all great. Now I have to listen to how the Swingle Singers did it. If memory serves, John Lewis (of MJQ) also did something with at least some part of this material. LOL! (I am a jazz person first) BTW @mahler123 I wanted to compliment you on the way you phrased this thread. Your use of the word favorite, not best or some such. Wonderful. Thanks. |
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