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Franz Joseph HAYDN (1732-1809)
String Quartets - Vol. 3
String Quartet in B flat major, op. 76 no. 4, Sunrise (Hob.III:78) (17) [22:51]
String Quartet in C major, op. 76 no. 3, Emperor (Hob.III:77) (17) [22:05]
String Quartet in D minor, op. 76 no. 2, Fifths (Hob III:76) (17) [21:45]
Leipziger Streichquartett (Stefan Arzberger (violin I); Tilman Büning (violin II); Ivo Bauer (viola); Matthias Moosdorf (cello))
rec. Ackerhaus der Abtei Marienmünster, Ehem, 4-6 November 2009,
DDD
MUSIKPRODUKTION DABRINGHAUS UND GRIMM MDG 307 1683-2 [67:03]
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The Sunrise makes for a quiet, inward-looking
and studious start to this CD. And you really appreciate the
exposition repeat which allows you to get to grips with what
it’s about. The first violin’s curvaceous ascent represents
the sunrise. The first theme’s mellow consideration soon gives
way to earnest activity, then back to the opening mood. The
second theme mirrors the first but with the melody this time
in the cello. In the development (tr. 1 4:19) the vigorous material
becomes more spiky but what’s more attractive, and very well
accomplished here by the Leipzig String Quartet, is the release
of tension as the texture thins and the music eases into the
recapitulation. I compared The Lindsays recorded in 1999 (ASV
CDDCA 1077). Their opening is more affectionately inflected,
their activity more animated, but the movement’s progression
isn’t revealed with the sheer refinement shown by the Leipzigers.
The slow movement is a deep contemplation around a five note
motif of which you are made clearly aware in the Leipzigers’
performance. Their presentation is plain but intent. The more
searching, even rapt character of the second phase of the movement
is satisfyingly revealed by the whole ensemble. Their understatement
shows more warmth and inwardness than the more moulded but also
self-conscious Lindsays.
After this the Minuet is rather disarmingly jocular. The Leipzigers
get across well the teasing quality of its tempo fluctuations
though to a degree which makes the disruptions unduly gawky.
The Trio has a rustic flavour to maintain such a mood, with
its viola and cello drone over which the violins’ melody slides.
But in its second section the viola is released to join the
violins and your focus is switched to the sweetness and light
of the first violin in upper register. The Lindsays’ more blatantly
comic bounce in the Minuet blends better with a Trio that is
at first still more feisty and assertive.
The finale, attractively presented by the Leipzigers with an
easygoing blitheness, continues the later, sweeter mood of the
Trio. Its increasingly faster, at first more feathery, closing
section is trimly accomplished by the Leipzigers but you’re
very much aware of it as a virtuoso technical display. The Lindsays
are more provocative: they send up the first violin’s grace
notes from the finale’s opening phrase and then float on the
sustained notes. Their closing section begins nonchalantly and
continues precisely etched.
The second quartet on this Leipzigers’ CD, the Emperor,
is altogether different in manner. It’s direct, exuberantly
forthright and uncomplicated. The Leipzigers begin it in chipper
fashion. The sforzandos and lower parts are firmly projected
and there’s more emphasis on ensemble than first violin dominance,
its passages of semiquaver and demisemiquaver elaboration allowed
just to wheel neatly above the rest. In the development (tr.
5 3:37) the sequences are presented with silvery tone before
the theme is displayed in much more rugged manner as appropriate
to the drone in viola and cello. The recapitulation is then
an appreciated return to civil normality. It’s a pity the second
half of the movement, unlike the first, isn’t repeated, especially
because Haydn asks for the close, from 6:05 here, to be faster
the second time, so you lose that adrenalin effect. The Lindsays
(from 1998, ASV CDDCA 1076) do make the repeat and approach
everything with more rigour and swagger.
The ‘Emperor’ (Austrian national anthem) theme of the slow movement
(tr. 6) is stated calmly by the Leipzigers and gradually takes
on more of the character of a formal dance. Variation 1 (1:04)
offers a nicely rounded statement by the second violin and neat
first violin filigree work above. Variation 2 (2:03) is treated
as a lullaby, with the theme now in the cello and the first
violin’s counter-play tender and sympathetic. In Variation 3
(3:00) the tune comes in the viola with denser involvement of
the other parts but is still flexibly and companionably presented
here. In Variation 4 (4:14) the tune is back in the first violin
and more reflective in silky high register, sealing the whole
presentation as a grateful homage. I prefer this to the more
emotive Lindsays who for me become rather unctuous.
The Leipzigers’ Minuet is courtly, relaxed and attractive, but
I feel the more rhythmic second part of both sections could
skip more, as the Lindsays show. However, the Trio responds
better to the Leipzigers’ understatement. It’s grave until transformed,
even if only for a spell, from A minor to A major, like seeing
the same person in different circumstances. In the Leipzigers’
finale you feel the rhetoric of the crotchet chords more than
the shimmer of the quaver triplets, but these do later become
more prominent. In the development (tr. 8 2:46) they cut across
the melodic progress with more effect and things become more
impetuous. The Leipzigers’ performance is finely proportioned
but the Lindsays are more exciting.
The Fifths is a great study in subversion.
Its first movement begins rigorously enough but the consolatory
brightness of its second theme (tr. 9 0:23) is what you prefer
to remember. The development (3:24) sees a transformation and
mellowing of the initial material at the same time as its opening
four-note motif (the falling fifths in the first violin) becomes
more significant as a unifying and steadying force. The Leipzigers
are more refined and intellectual than the Lindsays’ more personal
and passionate approach (ASV CDDCA 1076 recorded in 1999) which
offers a sweeter yet somewhat less substantial second theme.
The winsome slow movement spotlights a first violin melody and
here the Leipzigers’ Stefan Arzberger manages to be both folksy
and gracefully sophisticated where Peter Cropper for the Lindsays
is more modest and unassuming. Arzberger is the more classical.
The Minuet returns to D minor rigour but of a very odd kind
as the first and second violins are stalked by the viola and
cello three beats behind. As both are in their lower register
the effect is rather that of a trailing double-bass. This is
clearer and more disturbing in the Leipzigers’ account though
it has less gusto than the Lindsays. The D major Trio places
a Vivaldian succession of crotchet chords as a backcloth for
a sweet and toying first violin solo. The Leipzigers bring out
the toying aspect more whereas the Lindsays are more exciting
in dynamic shading. In the D minor finale the subversive brightness
is confined at first to the first violin’s leap of a fifth at
the end of the first phrase but you know the theme is going
to end up, satisfyingly and after a little sleight of hand in
the development, in the major. All this is stylishly effected
by the Leipzigers, again more classically than the Lindsays’
more cheeky first violin leap. They also sport a feistier development
and more delicate and sweet major version of the theme. A good
way to end a CD of clean, thoughtful, satisfyingly classical
accounts. The playing is refined and precise; the recording
has fine immediacy and presence.
Michael Greenhalgh
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