This constitutes the third and final disc Naxos have dedicated 
    to the string quartets of Basque composer, Andrés Isasi. Indeed Naxos have 
    served this composer well, this being the fourth CD of his music, which is 
    more than all the other record companies together have managed. The Naxos 
    recording of the Symphony No. 2 was reviewed 
here 
    and 
here. 
    The earliest Isasi disc the site has surveyed forms volume 4 of Claves' 
    'Basque Music Collection' (
review).
    
    I remember being somewhat disappointed by the music offered on the first release 
    in the String Quartet series (
8.472463), 
    so much so that I still have not got Volume 2 (
8.572464) 
    and after repeated listening to this disc, it will be a while longer before 
    I decide to invest in it. The problem for me is one of musical language; I 
    like my Spanish composers to offer music with a Spanish soul, whereas here 
    we get music clearly influenced by his musical education in Berlin, where 
    his teachers included Engelbert Humperdinck. The music of the quartets, which 
    has been edited by the violist, Karsten Dobers, is more central European than 
    Iberian. The notes talk of the initial influences of Grieg and Dvořák 
    on the development of his style, if so it was early Dvořák rather than 
    his later masterpieces. This is pleasant music which is Germanic in flavour 
    with excerpts which sound almost English. The music harks back to the early 
    romanticism of the mid-nineteenth century, I especially enjoyed the slow second 
    movement of the Fifth Quartet. If there is any Basque influences here they 
    are masked by the heavy cloak of the great Austro-German tradition.
    
    The Violin Sonata, which is the latest work on this disc, at least sounds 
    as if it was composed in the twentieth century. It is here that the Basque 
    influence comes through, though with tinges of late-romanticism in the guise 
    of Richard Strauss. This is my favourite work on the two discs that I own, 
    which is saying something as I am a string quartet nut. The national influences 
    come from Basque melodies and songs which Isasi has developed into his own 
    unique style. The piano writing has a particularly Spanish feel. This is echoed 
    in the violin, which has some particularly Spanish virtuosic phrasing. I could 
    almost say that this work alone is worth the investment in this disc.
    
    The Isasi Quartet has a warmth which accentuates the romanticism of the music, 
    with their first violin, Anna Bohigas, being joined for a spirited and enjoyable 
    performance of the Sonata by the pianist, Marta Zabaleta. Both quartets and 
    the Sonata have been recorded well by the engineers, while the brief notes 
    are very helpful and informative.
    
    
Stuart Sillitoe