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Erich Wolfgang
KORNGOLD (1897-1957)
The String Quartets: No. 1 in A major, Op. 16 (1920-23) [32:20];
No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 26 (1933) [21:59]; No. 3 in D major,
Op. 34 (1944-45) [25:24]
Doric String Quartet (Alex Redington (violin); Jonathan Stone (violin);
Simon Tandree (viola); John Myerscough (cello))
rec. Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk, 5-7 April 2010. DDD
CHANDOS CHAN10611 [79:57]
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Korngold and the string quartet. It’s not a medium you
might link with him; at least not if you associate Korngold
with Hollywood film music. Korngold and the grand opera - well,
yes. Korngold and the symphony - certainly - although there
is only one. Korngold’s fame for music of voluptuous,
Straussian excess and glorious saturated lyricism hardly prepares
you for a composer who wrote three such four-movement works
from his twenties to his mid-forties. Short of the string trio
the quartet is among the most ascetic and demanding of formats.
Korngold was equal to the challenge and wove and shaped the
medium to his style.
From the composer’s perspective of 1920-23 he already
had behind him operas, ambitious orchestral music and chamber
music. To write a string quartet was one of the most natural
things for a young master-composer living in Vienna. He had
just finished the opera Die Tote Stadt and within the
last decade as a teenager he had written the grand Sinfonietta.
The First Quartet was premiered by the famed Rosé Quartet
in 1924 in Vienna; in London in 1925. It is a loftily skilled
work of warm and singing release. It uses themes of a caste
that will be familiar from the film scores and opera; indeed
a melody in the finale was later used in his opera Die Kathrin
(1932-37). We hear a lavish mix which should appeal if you already
like the quartets by Smetana, Marx, Schoeck, Bowen or Howells.
The Second Quartet also radiates romantic warmth from its four
movements including the affectionate first with its stabbing
Beethovenian fate motif. The irresistibly smiling Intermezzo
takes us back to the café culture delight’s of
Smetana 1 while there is haunting strength and vulnerable delicacy
in the affecting Larghetto. The finale again hymns the
delights of Vienna and its all-pervasive waltz. It was also
premiered by the Rosé.
The Third Quartet is dedicated to Bruno Walter “in admiration
and friendship”. It was premiered by the Roth Quartet
in LA in 1946. More spare in its textures, the warmth has been
tempered by his forced exile to Hollywood as a consequence of
Hitler’s annexation of Austria. The spiky Scherzo
can stand representative of the whole work. The innocent smile
of the earlier two works will never quite return. Film score
themes from Devotion and Between Two Worlds are
used. There’s still warmth - how could it not be there
- but experience of world events was bound to change the accent.
The deeply moving Sostenuto is wistful - even melancholic.
He summons up the world of the earlier quartets with music of
Beethovenian fate-bound declamatory grit and rousing amiability.
The Doric project virile vigour and their sound is most powerfully
and engagingly captured. The ASV recordings by the Flesch Quartet
(review;
review)
are a shade warmer and the listener is two or three steps back
from the music-making. The ASV version uses two discs and adds
the Sextet. The logic of having all three quartets on one disc
is unanswerable. Korngold biographer Brendan
G Carroll wrote the detailed notes for both the Chandos
and the ASV. If you are reading up on Korngold let me put in
a word also for Jessica Duchen’s more compact and amazingly
fluent Phaidon biography of the composer. Carroll’s is,
on the other hand, skilled, informed by years of research, authoritative
and exhaustive. In Sibelian terms Carroll is Tawastjerna or
Barnett (Andrew) to Duchen’s Guy Rickards. Such a pity
that neither of these Korngold biographies are in print.
Stylish and emotionally adroit recordings of Korngold’s
three quartets. Go for it!
Rob Barnett
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