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Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting
$16.49
$21.99
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Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting
Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting
Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting
Beethoven Complete String Quartets 5-CD Box Set | Classical Music Collection | Perfect for Home Listening, Study & Gifting
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Description
Audite's fifth volume of the Complete Beethoven String Quartets presents not only the Op. 132 String Quartet but also Beethoven's only original String Quintet. Lawrence Dutton , the violist of the Emerson String Quartet, joins the Quartetto di Cremona . Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart left six string quintets to the music world, Louis Spohr's work catalogue contains seven, whilst Luigi Boccherini completed around 120. Ludwig van Beethoven had three quintets published; however, only one of these was originally conceived for string quintet - the upset over the different editions was clearly so serious that the Viennese maestro felt no desire to write any more ""real"" quintets. However, his opus 29 of 1801 is a true masterwork on the brink between the Classical style of his teacher, Joseph Haydn, and the revolutionary idiom of Beethoven's middle and late periods. The Adagio (with its adjunct of ""molto espressivo"") in particular heralds an evocative intensity which was still foreign in Beethoven's earlier works. However, for his late oeuvre of the 1820s - the Ninth Symphony, Missa solemnis , late piano sonatas and string quartets - Beethoven had developed such a distinctive language that the label of ""Early Romanticism"" no longer applies. His String Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, with its five movements and exceptional degree of difficulty also stands apart from contemporary works; then and now, only professional ensembles could tackle this grandly conceived colossus. As in the quintet, the Molto adagio represents the core of the piece. Its title - ""Holy song of thanksgiving of a convalescent to the Deity"" - refers to an illness from which the composer had recovered, and adapts a chant inspired by the Renaissance composer Palestrina. In so doing, Beethoven includes a musical ancestor in his quartet whilst making a religious avowal.
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The lyrical, songlike aspects of Beethoven receive emphasis in this fifth volume of the 16 Beethoven string quartets by the Quartetto Di Cremona. Founded by students of the Cremonese Conservatory, the quartet has been together for about fifteen years.. Each member of the quartet performs on a historical instrument of the Cremonese school of violin making. The Quartetto Di Cremona is a worthy successor to the Quartetto Italiano as the premier Italian string quartet. This CD is my first exposure to the ensemble, and thus I come to its Beethoven cycle towards the end. I have read the impressive reviews here on Amazon of the prior four volumes. In its performance of the cycle, the Quartetto Di Cremona has adopted a "mixed" approach by including works from Beethoven's three compositional periods on each CD rather than performing the works by opus number.This CD includes a work from Beethoven's first period, the opus 29 string quintet, and a work from his final period, the A minor string quartet, opus. 132. Although these two works are highly different, they both work beautifully with the lyrical, singing reading the Quartetto gives them.Opus 29 is Beethoven's only original string quintet although he arranged two other compositions in this form. Violist Lawrence Dutton of the Emerson String Quartet joins the ensemble in this work. Beethoven's string quintet is a rarely-performed masterpiece and a find for a composer much of whose work is familiar. It is both radiant and serene with hints of underlying melancholy in each of its four movements. The first violin is emphasized throughout with long singing themes in the instrument's upper register. The work also includes extensive counterpoint, particularly in the finale, and lovely, close textures, including a pizzicato accompaniment to the first violin in the flowing slow movement. The opening movement develops a long singing theme and a somewhat more reclusive second theme. The intimate slow movement is interrupted twice by sections in the minor key while the short scherzo showcases the solo violin and cello. The finale begins with a dramatic tremolo and, as in the prior movements, is twice interrupted in its flow by minor key sections. I have grown to love the op. 29 quintet over the years and have reviewed it twice before on Amazon: in 2006 with the Zurich String Quintet and in 2010 with the Fine Arts Quartet and violist Gil Sharon. It was a joy to return to the quintet in this beautiful singing performance.There is a tendency to over-emphasize the structural, thematic aspects of Beethoven's music together with what my friend Scott Morrison describes in his review of the first volume of the Quartetto Di Cremona's cycle as the composer's "pride, stubbornness, crustiness, and complete originality". So it is, but this description overlooks the strongly lyrical character of much of Beethoven which is found in the final work on this CD, the great string quartet no. 14 in A minor, op. 132, as well as in the string quintet. The centerpiece of the work is expressly cast as a song, the "Holy Song of Thanksgiving to the Deity in Recovery from an Illness in the Lydian Mode." This movement is a sublime moment of song in its serene theme combined with its more passionate sections. The remaining four movements of the quartet also have strongly lyrical components with the exception of the brief, fourth movement angular march. The opening movement with its many shifts of mood and direction relies as much on song as on thematic texture, while the second movement has an almost rustic simplicity at times in its lyricism. The yearning finale is dramatic and passionate, but it sings above all. The reading by the Quartetto Di Creomona heloped me focus on the lyrical character of this music to a greater extent than I had done before. Their reading stresses the songlike components of the work without sacrificing the structure. In 2005, I reviewed the Guarneri Quartet's cycle of the Beethoven quartets. My review emphasized the performance of the op. 132 quartet, as I was recovering from an illness of my own at the time. It was a joy again to return to op. 132 in the recording by the Quartetto Di Cremona.The CD was recorded in Italy in 2014. The liner notes are unusually good and they emphasize the approach taken in the performance. For example, the notes to op. 132 quote an earlier critic who wrote: "It is the vocal character which holds together the A minor Quartet more than the motivic element." The writer of the notes continues on his own: "Indeed there is hardly any theme -- with the exception of the march which is clearly defined as an instrumental genre -- that does not originate from a vocal spirit." The CD is on the Audite label and distributed by Naxos. Naxos kindly sent me a review copy.Total Time: 80:47Robin Friedman

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