CATALAN STRING QUARTETS
	  Josep SOLER String Quartet No 1
	  (1974)
	  Miquel ROGER String Quartet No 2
	  (1994)
	  Albert SARDA String Quartet
	  (1978)
	  Josep SOLER String Quartet No 5 (1994)
	  
 Kreutzer Quartet
	  rec 26-28 Aug 1998, St John's, Loughton
	  
 METIER MSV CD 92026
	  [79.15]
	  Crotchet
	   Metier
	  
	  
	  
	  
	  This tightly packed Metier issue digs deep into a little known and unfashionable
	  corner of the string quartet repertoire. The quartet is a far from populist
	  medium (pace Elvis Costello and the Kronos) and when you combine this
	  with the 1970s hurly-burly language of a Catalan Schnittke one is reaching
	  deep. The music never stays still long enough to boring. Its relentless
	  invention, pizzicato sprints, shrieks and howls are not unmusical but a return
	  trip though undoubtedly rewarding may not be encouraged. This contrasts with
	  the still forbidding but more approachable Roger work which in its slides
	  and melodic fragments takes us into the late Beethoven quartets with a lyric
	  spin familiar from Benjamin Frankel's quartets (recorded admirably and complete
	  on CPO). The Sarda's Schoenbergian quartet presents an unyielding face to
	  the listener. It is a dense and obdurate piece - tough and passionate. It
	  slips and slides into quarter notes rather like the John Foulds Cello Sonata
	  (a work of a more welcomingly lyric expressivity). The 1995 Soler work shrugs
	  off the dodecaphonics of years gone by. The contrast is stunning. Think of
	  the subtle regretful melodics of the central movement of the Tippett Triple
	  Concerto and mix that with the quiet but confident explorations of the late
	  quartets of Beethoven. The tonality drifts mistily but there is no harshness;
	  no violent assaults. At the same time the music is not anodyne. At times
	  it communicates as an epic passacaglia - confident and fluent.
	  
	  We would have benefited from some more biographical information about the
	  three composers.
	  
	  Otherwise this is a very fine disc for a discerning audience. The music would
	  make apt late night listening.
	  
	  Rob Barnett
	  
	  
	  
	  Three 12 tone string quartets and one tonal quartet. Music both tough and
	  subtle. Only the Sarda strikes me as weak. First class upfront recording.