Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elisabeth Kufferath. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Elisabeth Kufferath. Mostrar todas las entradas
miércoles, 8 de abril de 2020
miércoles, 4 de marzo de 2020
viernes, 24 de marzo de 2017
Tetzlaff Quartett SCHUBERT String Quartet No. 15 HAYDN String Quartet Op. 20 No. 3
There is no better way to experience intimacy in music than through the
magic of string quartets. I experienced this myself as an amateur
violinist many years ago when I organized a trio, and later when I was
invited to participate in performing quartets.
In this new recording the prestigious Tetzlaff Quartett (Christian
Tetzlaff, Elisabeth Kufferath, Hanna Weinmeister and Tanja Tetzlaff)
present a program of String Quartets by Franz Schubert and Joseph Haydn
in exemplary performances.
Praised by The New York Times for its “dramatic, energetic playing of
clean intensity”, the Tetzlaff Quartett is one of today’s leading
string quartets. Alongside their successful individual careers,
Christian and Tanja Tetzlaff, Hanna Weinmeister and Elisabeth Kufferath
have met since 1994 to perform several times each season in concerts
that regularly receive great critical acclaim.
sábado, 6 de agosto de 2016
Tetzlaff Quartett MENDELSSOHN Quartet Op. 13 BERG Lyric Suite
The Tetzlaff Quartet is unusual in consisting of four busy soloists
who get together only intermittently. The upside is that what they do
has the tension and imagination of four big personalities, and that
certainly pays off here.
Their combined sound is highly refined and honed, resulting in a
tautness of approach that gives Mendelssohn’s A minor Quartet real
potency and drive. Even in the most driven passages, textures always
have a sparkling clarity. Just dip into the first movement (beginning at
2'30"), where viola player Hanna Weinmeister takes over the melody with
eloquence. The Elias are more refulgent in tone, generally more
open-hearted in the touching Adagio non lento, but the Tetzlaff’s
greater austerity is also very moving. And their finale is particularly
searing, bringing out the contrast between the melodramatic tremolos and the leader’s impassioned recitatives, the light-as-air passages of the upper three players and the pungent pizzicatos
of the cellist. The Elias are equally zesty but with a wilder edge
here, as if chaos is a hair’s breadth away. Both, in their different
ways, are riveting.
The Berg makes a compelling if unusual coupling and the Tetzlaff reveal its extraordinary beauties. They are alive to every nuance, every
emotional change of this highly charged music, yet never lose sight of
the music’s architecture. Just sample the way they move from an
otherworldly quiet to the most impassioned playing (tr 6, from 2'37")
with a sense of inevitability and they convey the mournful desperation
of the finale more potently than the Cecilia Quartet. I’d rate this new
reading of the Lyric Suite alongside that treasurable performance of the Tetzlaff/Uchida/Boulez Chamber Concerto (Decca, 12/08). (Harriet Smith / Gramophone)
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