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Louis SPOHR (1784-1859) Complete String Quartets Volume 12
String Quartet No.33 in G, Op.146 (1851) [32:43]
String Quartet No.35 in E-flat, Op.155 (1856) [21:50]
Potpourri No.1 in G on themes from Gaveau’s Le petit matelot,
Op.5 (1804) [15:09]
Dima Quartet,
Moscow: (Sergey Girschenko, Alexey Gulianitsky (violins);
Georgy Kapitonov (viola); Dmitry Yablonsky (cello))
rec. Studio of State Radio House, Moscow, 25 November 2005-9
January 2006. DDD MARCO POLO
8.225316 [69:41]
Spohr wrote an heroic
number of string quartets in the course of his long composing
career, so Marco Polo’s complete recordings have had to run
to equally epic proportions, now standing at 12 volumes. At
two quartets per volume and with 36 quartets to record, there
are still a few volumes to go. The two works on the present
recording are billed as ‘World Première Recordings’.
Earlier volumes, up to
and including Nos. 8 (8.223258) and 9 (8.223259) were made
with the New Budapest Quartet and Volumes 10 (8.225306) and
11 (8.225307) were recorded with the Concertino String Quartet
of Moscow; Volume 12 switches to another Moscow-based group,
the Dima Quartet, whom I had not previously encountered,
though I had come across Dmitry Yablonsky, the cellist, in
his alter ego as a conductor. Since the booklet and
the Naxos webpage describe the members of the quartet individually
rather than as a group, I assume that they have only recently
come together.
Colin Clarke enjoyed both
the music and the performances on Volumes
10 and 11 but Jonathan
Woolf was more sceptical about the music and performances
on Volume 11: “[Spohr is not] at his most convincing here
in performances that don’t do quite enough to assist.” Other
reviewers thought the Moscow performances a degree less recommendable
than the earlier Budapest volumes.
Spohr’s earliest quartet
was written within a few years of Beethoven’s Op.18 set,
but the two works on this recording are late works, inhabiting
the world of Mendelssohn rather than that of Haydn, Mozart
and Beethoven. Some of his chamber music was written for
display, as was the case with the Potpourri which
ends the CD, a work influenced by the so-called quatuor
brilliant. Though technical excellence was always a
means to an end for Spohr, rather than an end in itself,
the Potpourri is a largely irrelevant makeweight here
after two works where display is kept well in hand.
My first impression was
that the recording was a trifle thin, somewhat redolent of
a well-remastered 1960s chamber music recording. Perhaps
my ear has become accustomed to the fuller tone which recording
engineers like to produce these days for chamber music, which
sometimes make the sound a degree too bass-heavy for some
systems. Or maybe the recording is truthful in conveying
the leader’s slightly thin tone.
The slight thinness never
precludes the cello from receiving its full due. In any
case, by the end of the first movement of No.33 my ears had
attuned themselves to the recording and the slightly hesitant
playing had become more assured. This is a serious work,
dating from a troubled period in Spohr’s life when relations
with his employer were strained, following the composer’s
support for the abortive 1848 revolution. It has an especially
fine slow movement, described in the booklet as a passive
lament. The Dima Quartet make a good attempt to match the
mood of this movement (track 2) but they failed to persuade
me that it had an intensity even approaching that of the
slow movement of Schubert’s String Quintet or the ‘lament
for Fanny’ of Mendelssohn’s Op.80 Quartet of seven years
earlier.
Here, as throughout the
recording, the Dima Quartet seemed still to be exploring
the music themselves rather than fully in command of it – after
all, these are billed as first recordings. The recording
of No.35 certainly is ground-breaking since the composer
imposed an embargo on the performance of his last two quartets. Breaking
this 150-year-old prohibition has not produced music of the
quality of the realisation of Elgar’s Third Symphony or even
Grieg’s youthful Symphony, but the performance largely justifies
the verdict of the scholar Hans Glenewinkel in 1912, that
the work “possesses so many merits in its transparency and
more natural language” as to be worth performing. Here again
the performance struck me as slightly tentative and marginally
lacking in intensity, but perhaps that is because the players
are trying to bring out the transparency and naturalness
to which Glenewinkel refers. Perhaps also they have in mind
Spohr’s own stated wish to return to the classical ideals
of Haydn and Mozart.
Certainly they produce
some very beautiful playing, as in the second, andantino movement
(track 6), a performance which goes some way to persuading
me that this movement is at least the equal of that of No.33. Spohr’s
marking Romanze: andantino indicates a lighter touch
than the Adagio molto of No.33 and, paradoxically,
by trying less hard, he produces almost the same intensity
in a manner which the players are able to evoke.
In the Menuetto: moderato (track
7) and Finale : Allegro non troppo (track 8), too,
they capture the mood of the music very well. Those familiar
with Spohr’s early works such as the Nonet and Octet will
find a similar tunefulness here in this work of his old age. The
same is true of the Potpourri but, then, that is even
earlier than the Nonet. It’s in some ways similar
to the Triebensee wind-band version of numbers from Mozart’s Don
Giovanni, a version of which I have just reviewed for
Musicweb. Part of the fun of the Triebensee is recognising
the tunes from the opera. Modern listeners are unlikely,
however, to be familiar with Gaveau’s Le petit matelot
ou le mariage impromptu (1796) on which the Spohr Potpourri is
based. It’s a pleasant enough work, well played here, but
it seems out of place – more a pot-boiler than a potpourri – after
the more intense style of the late quartets, No.33 especially. When
will the record companies start to put the minor work(s)
first?
The booklet contains detailed
notes, written by Professor Clive Brown, an acknowledged
authority on Spohr, and Keith Warsop, Chairman of the Spohr
Society of Great Britain. The cover is decorated with another
of that seemingly endless supply of 18th and 19th century
paintings with which Naxos and Marco Polo make their covers
so much more stylish than most.
The virtues of these performances
and the recording outweigh any shortcomings, but I wouldn’t
advise beginners to start to explore Spohr’s chamber music
with this CD. It’s not just for completists – it amounts
to much more than that – but the Nonet and Octet are
the place to begin. If this CD had been issued at Naxos
price it would have been easier to recommend it.
As it is, Marco Polo’s
own recordings of Spohr’s String Quintets with the
augmented New Haydn Quartet, now reissued on Naxos, make
a better, and less expensive, follow-up to the Nonet and Octet. Jonathan
Woolf has reviewed Nos. 1 and
2 (8.555965)
and 3 and 4 (8.555966)
and Robert Hugill Nos. 5 and 6 (8.555967). For
the Nonet, see Glyn Pursglove’s recent review of the
recording on ASV
GLD4026. The
classic Vienna Octet coupling of the Spohr and Schubert Octets on
466 580-2 is still my version of choice – reviewed and recommended
by Harry
Downey. Even the one adverse review of this version
of the Schubert which I have seen recommends the Vienna Octet
version of the Spohr. There are also good versions of the
Double Quartets, played by the ASMF Chamber Ensemble on a
Hyperion Dyad twofer, CDD22014.
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