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Ignaz PLEYEL (1757-1831)
Paris Quartets Volume 1 (Concert Rarities from the Pleyel Museum
Volume 8)
String Quartet in C, B.365 (1803) [25:09]
String Quartet in B flat, B.366 (1803) [17:06]
String Quartet in F minor, B.367 (1803) [21:04]
Janáček Quartet (Miloš Vacek (violin); Vítězslav
Zavadilík (violin); Jan Řezníček (viola);
Břetislav Vybíral (cello))
rec. Marmorsaal, Prämonstratenserstift, Geras, Austria, 8 May
2011. DDD
ARS PRODUKTION ARS 38818 [63:26]
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Although a fair bit of Austrian - and latterly French - composer
Ignaz Pleyel's music is now available on CD, there is a long
way to go before all the String Quartets are recorded. In 1977
Rita Benton's thematic catalogue of Pleyel's works was published,
listing an incredible 74 extant String Quartets, plus another
eight in which the composer has cannily recycled some of his
originals by adding new movements. Benson catalogued these with
the numbers 301 through to 370, with several insertions given
a letter A or B: 325A-330A, 348A, 350A, 367A, 367B, 369A and
369B. There are also a further six that can double up as Flute
Quartets (B.381-386). The Austria-based International Ignaz
Pleyel Society gives the Quartets total as 70 (B.301-370), although
this is due to the fact that they have not counted the individual
items in their own table, which in fact tallies with the Benson
catalogue.
As with Pleyel's 48 Symphonies, a number of this order makes
his a significant contribution to the genre, all the more so
considering the fact that he wrote nearly all of them in a very
fertile decade from 1782-92. The three Quartets in this recording
are rare later essays, dedicated to Boccherini, made when Pleyel
had turned his hand to the business of music publishing and
settled in Paris.
Pleyel did not blaze any musical trails, nor indeed hesitate
to chop and change movements to create 'new' works for publishers.
His music was extremely popular in his lifetime above all because
it was always very elegantly crafted, melodious and imaginative,
with an abundance of memorable tunes enhanced by surprising
harmonic colourations and rhythmic deviations. Pleyel's deep
musical intelligence was undoubtedly heightened by his exposure
to Europe's finest minds through his publishing house, which
produced among other things a complete edition of his teacher
Haydn's own Quartets. He takes the unequivocal mellifluousness
of these works beyond mere crowd-pleasing functionality into
the realms of sophisticated artistry. No admirer of Haydn's
late String Quartets can fail to be pleased by this disc, although
Pleyel's voice is distinctive and his style decidedly more French
than Austrian.
Sound quality is very good, although with a couple of riders.
First, there are occasional 'noises off' - not much of a distraction,
but still there when they ought not to be. Nothing much can
be done outside of a studio setting about the intrusion of traffic
noise, but a few minutes into the Quartet in B flat there is
an audible join that follows a series of taps - as if something
more serious was edited out. Fortunately there was a brief rest
in the music where the join came, so no real harm is done. However,
in the final movement there is another episode of what sounds
like someone faffing about with the recording equipment. Again,
the disturbance is subtle, such that it is only likely to be
noticed through headphones. Elsewhere, some reverb has been
added, recording volume is set to very high and the first
violin has been given too much prominence, slightly unbalancing
the recording and making the player’s breathing unnecessarily
audible.
If the Janáček Quartet were distracted by technical
shenanigans, they keep it well hidden, apart perhaps from an
occasional tendency to be hesitant. The four current members
bring an enormous amount of experience to their recitals. They
naturally specialise in core Germanic-Slavic repertoire, from
the mid-18th to mid-20th century. Pleyel's Quartets need and
deserve such a champion. Nevertheless, they do not seem at their
most convincing at this end of the repertoire - like Haydn,
Pleyel requires a little less earnestness than Janáček
or Beethoven, and these performances, though first-rate in many
respects, come across as just a little too formal.
The booklet notes are detailed, informative and excellently
translated, although on one occasion mathematically insecure:
a quartet formed as stated in 1947 has, by 2012, gone more than
the claimed "fifty years since its founding". For some reason
the Quartet in C, like the one in B flat a first recording,
appears in the inside track-list thus: "Streichquartett [...]
für Violine Principal, Klavier und Orchester." Elsewhere
in the booklet there is also a handy note on the Ignaz Pleyel
Society, a scattering of small photos, and details of previous
volumes in this series.
Those that find their appetite for Pleyel whetted by this disc
can turn to the Luigi Tomasini Quartet, who recorded op.11 1-3
on Hungaroton (HCD 32593, 2009); or to the American Ensō
Quartet, who recorded B.307-312 across two releases for Naxos
half a dozen years ago (review,
review);
and to two volumes of the so-called 'Prussian' Quartets recorded
by the Pleyel Quartet Köln for CPO (777 315-2, 777
551-2). As far as the Janáček Quartet are concerned,
they have already been back to record a second volume of the
Paris Quartets for ARS (38820). In this regard, it is also worth
noting that all previous entries in the 'Konzert-Raritäten
aus dem Pleyel-Museum' series are available, featuring chamber
and orchestral music by Pleyel, and even an opera (see 38811
to 38820).
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk
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