Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Friedemann Weigle. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Friedemann Weigle. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 19 de marzo de 2019

Artemis Quartet / Elisabeth Leonskaja SHOSTAKOVICH

Formed in 1989, the Artemis Quartett fist came to widespread international recognition after they won the ARD International Music Competition almost eighteen years ago. Since then, the quartet has gone on to play at all of the major concert venues around the globe. Their many recordings include string quartets by Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Schubert.
Born in Latvia, Vineta Sareika is one of the quartet's two remarkable violin players. She was a founding member of the well-respected Trio Dali and was appointed as the principal concertmaster of the Royal Flemish Philharmonic in 2011. The other violinist in the quartet is Gregor Sigl who studied at the Albert Greiner Music School in Augsburg before going on to the Mozarteum in Salzburg. Sigl is now a professor at the University of Fine Arts in Berlin.
The team of four prestigious musicians is completed by Friedemann Weigle, on viola, and cellist Eckart Runge. Weigle joined the quartet in 2007 and holds the post of guest professor at the Chapelle Reine Elisabeth, based in Brussels. Whilst he was still a student, Weigle was made the principal viola player with none other than the Berlin Symphony Orchestra. Runge is another highly skilled musician, whose cello playing has led him to win several international competitions.
The origins of this album – the Artemis Quartet’s first recordings of Shostakovich – lie in the ensemble’s long-established relationship with the great pianist Elisabeth Leonskaja. For years, the quartet had been wanting to record the Russian composer’s Piano Quintet with her. It is coupled with Quartets No 5 and No 7, multi-faceted works which are expressive of the composer’s private persona.

martes, 22 de diciembre de 2015

Artemis Quartet BRAHMS String Quartets Nos. 1 & 3

The Artemis Quartet pairs Brahms’ intense first quartet with his lighter-spirited third quartet, both works that the Artemis’ cellist, Eckart Runge, describes as “remarkable and multi-faceted”. He says that “Brahms marries a Romantic spirit with the structure and forms of Classicism. There is an almost symphonic approach in the writing, but at the same time the quartets are imbued with a sense of warmth, immediacy, friendship and love that is interwoven with a more spiritual, timeless beauty”.
Ever aware of the shadow of Beethoven, Brahms was 40 years old by the time he completed the first of his three published string quartets (op 51, No 1) in 1873; he is thought to have destroyed the 20 or so quartets that he had written previously. The third quartet (op 67) followed in 1875, the year before the premiere of the composer’s Symphony No 1, and a decade after the publication of his piano quintet, which the Artemis Quartet has recorded with Leif Ove Andsnes.
“Brahms wrote three remarkable, multi-faceted quartets and we have recorded the first and third here,” continues Runge. “They were long considered to be quite conservative because their structure and thematic workings are in the tradition of Beethoven, but no less an innovator than Schoenberg called Brahms a ‘revolutionary traditionalist’ and saw these quartets as modern in their conception.
“These quartets are fantastic – full of ideas, contrasts and emotion. They are challenging to play – especially No 1 – because there is so much thematic material ... there is nothing in there that is not important. As players, you have to work out all the material, and the musical structure is deep and complex, while the textures can become dense with Brahms’ characteristic use of polyrhythms ... But at the same time you need to maintain transparency so that the audience can readily appreciate what it is hearing. This might be intellectual music, but its beauty should still give you goose bumps!
“The quartet No 3 doesn’t have the same dramatic weight as No 1 – it is characterised by a certain lightness and playfulness and is perhaps less ambitiously conceived than quartets No 1 and No 2 ... maybe, by this point, Brahms was less preoccupied with showing the world that he could cope with Beethoven! It’s gentler and more easy-going. Perhaps you could say that it feels more like a late composition. But there are some astonishing things going on ... the Mozartian opening theme; the way the first movement is quoted in the last movement; the prominence given to the viola in the third movement. The work’s basic character is friendly, but it has lots of interesting, audacious ideas.
“In all this, Brahms marries a Romantic spirit with the structure and forms of Classicism. There is an almost symphonic approach in the writing, but at the same time the quartets remain concise ... and imbued with a sense of warmth, immediacy, friendship and love – a feeling of Gemütlichkeit – that is interwoven and combined with a more spiritual, timeless beauty. There’s an eternity of line in the slow movements. It is music that embraces you, but it also music that has a higher perspective and which feels very complete.” (Presto Classical)