Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elias String Quartet. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elias String Quartet. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2018

Elias Quartet SCHUMANN Quartets Nos 2 & 3

In 2010 the Elias Quartet played the first of Schumann’s three string quartets at Wigmore Hall – a richly characterised, open-hearted reading that was recorded and released on that venue’s in-house label. Now, at last, the Elias complete the cycle with concert recordings from Potton Hall in Suffolk. If you were as impressed by the Wigmore performance as I was, rest assured that these new accounts do not disappoint, for I find them even more absorbingly detailed and emotionally generous.
Schumann composed these quartets as a birthday gift for Clara, writing at white heat so that the three works were completed in just seven weeks. The Doric Quartet capture this sense of urgency, though with a magical, quicksilver touch. The Elias, on the other hand, take their time. It’s not that their performances are so much leisurely as they are elastic. The music breathes in their hands; and even when they stretch a phrase as if to feel its emotional weight, it still sounds natural and right. And it’s not that they only pull; they push, too. In the opening movement of the F major Quartet, for instance, listen to how they make the exposition repeat feel more eager and excitable. Then savour the exquisite rubato at 4'08" in the Andante quasi variazioni, with its foreshadowing of a Mahlerian Ländler. Some may be irritated by the way the Elias ease gradually into the main tempo of the finale; I’m charmed by it, particularly as it’s played differently each time this tune returns.
The A major Quartet is, to my ears, the jewel of the set, and the Elias play it with profound tenderness. How rapturously they play the first movement’s slow introduction, for example; even the rests are made to sound as expressively necessary as the notes themselves. And in the second theme of the Allegro proper, where the cello sings to a palpitating accompaniment (at 1'36"), there’s a vulnerability so touching I could imagine Schumann’s heart asking ‘is this love too good to be true?’ Unlike the Stradivari Quartet, the Elias are meticulous in observing dynamic markings, and their pianissimo playing can produce shivers of pleasure. Indeed, they find eloquence in the smallest detail, like the second violin’s strumming grace notes at 3'34" in the Adagio.
I could go on enumerating the myriad glories of these performances, but you get the idea. I continue to be delighted by the Doric’s recording – and the Zehetmair’s – but the Elias’s has instantly become my favourite, and I can’t recommend it urgently enough. (Andrew Farach-Colton / Gramophone)

sábado, 6 de diciembre de 2014

Jonathan Biss / Elias String Quartet SCHUMANN & DVORÁK Piano Quintets

Jonathan Biss and the Elias Quartet deliver highly assured performances of these two marvellous chamber works. The opening of the Schumann is projected with suitably impetuous energy, and Biss brilliantly negotiates the tricky piano-quaver passagework in the first movement’s development section, balancing a growing sense of unease with exciting forward momentum. Occasionally, however, I find the players’ use of rubato a bit self-conscious. For instance, there seems no logically musical reason for the cello to elongate the first note of the lyrical second subject to such an extent. A similar issue resurfaces in their phrasing of the contrasting major-key idea in the second movement, the tendency to hold back the resolution of a particularly poignant harmonic progression becoming an irritating mannerism.
In general, this warmly recorded performance is most compelling when Schumann explores the extrovert side of his musical personality. The Scherzo’s sequence of ascending and descending scales is particularly exhilarating, as is the suitably rustic articulation of offbeat sforzando semiquavers in the second trio. Yet the interpretation as a whole doesn’t provide as many insights as the remarkable Harmonia Mundi release from Alexander Melnikov and the Jerusalem Quartet, which remains a clear first choice.
While there are some caveats about the Schumann, the Biss/Elias partnership produces a wonderful performance of the Dvorák, conveying not only the freshness of its invention but also probing darker melancholic undercurrents in the Dumka and Finale that are all too often overlooked by other interpreters. (Erik Levi, BBC Music Magazine)