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Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
String Quartets - Volume 1
String Quartet (No. 6) in F minor, Op. posth. 80 (1847) [25:38]
String Quartet (No. 1) in E flat major, Op.12 (1829) [24:19]
String Quartet (No. 4) in E minor, Op.44 No.2 (1837) [27:55]
New Zealand String Quartet
rec. 22-24, 30-31 July 2006, Holy Martyr’s Church, Bradford, Canada. DDD NAXOS 8.570001 [77:51]
Mendelssohn’s String
Quartets may still not be as highly regarded as they should
be but the number of sets of these works on CD is pretty impressive.
In his comparative
review Michael Cookson compared the merits of six complete
cycles and to these can be added, in my collection, at Full
Price: Eroica Quartet (HM), on period instruments and the excellent
Leipzig Quartet (MDG). At lower midprice/budget: Melos Quartet
(DG), Artis Quartet (Accord), Quatuor Ysaye (DG Triple), Coull
Quartet (Hyperion). Recently, the Cherubini Quartet were re-released
as a bargain triple on EMI but as Brian
Wilson points out theirs is not complete although it includes
the three works on this Naxos CD; for around £7 it is well
worth snapping up! Naxos too had previously brought out the
Aurora Quartet’s Mendelssohn on 3 CDs about 14 years ago. It
was through these performances that I got to know the works
as it’s rare to hear them in chamber concerts. As you can see,
the competition is pretty fierce in these works even for a £5
CD with 77 minutes of music!
The New Zealand
String Quartet (NZSQ) have been going about twenty years and
have made several CDs including a highly regarded Berg
disc released belatedly last year. They have been preparing
for the Mendelssohn cycle for some years and have performed
them regularly; July 2006 found them in Canada to lay down
the first installment. To complete this international connection,
the cover of the CD has a stone bench from Scotland for no
obvious reason! The recording is clear and, provided you can
cope with church acoustics, generally captures the quartet
well in these fine works.
Mendelssohn completed
seven quartets plus four pieces he included in Op. 81; one
remained unpublished in his lifetime. He published them in
a different order to composition so this CD therefore contains
his third, fourth and seventh quartets. NZSQ start with the
late quartet written in Mendelssohn’s last months with his “Dream” world
forsaken in the grief for his sister Fanny’s death. The first
movement is well played and sounds good but I missed the passion
other renditions reach. The whole performance was fine and
would be good in a concert but not top-notch. Moving surprisingly
back to Op.12, actually his third written quartet, the NZSQ
put in a spirited performance but appear to hold something
back. This piece was a natural development for the youthful
genius who’d written his Octet at 16! Five years later the
first movement has a slow beginning, harking back to Beethoven’s
Op. 74 “Harp Quartet”; although this “beginning before the
beginning” originated with Haydn and was developed by Mozart.
NZSQ play this with just the right emphasis and continue well
in the super melody
which follows. When we get to the wonderful second movement Canzonetta,
with its throwback to “Midsummer Nights Dream” the NZSQ seem
marginally less involved than either the previous Naxos version
by the Aurora. Certainly they trail behind The Henschel Quartet:
Michael Cookson’s top choice. For a historic version I played
the 1935 Budapest Quartet, which I got for a £1 last year coupled
with with their legendry Grieg; despite the age and “portamenti”;
it’s heavenly! NZSQ acquit themselves in the last two movements
- on their own terms I enjoyed this.
The String Quartet
No. 4 in E minor, Op. 44, and No.2, completed 18 June 1837 is
roughly midway between No. 1 and No. 6 and was just after Mendelssohn
had married the eighteen-year-old Cécile Jeanrenaud. Like Haydn,
Mendelssohn returning to the quartet wrote three and the key
E minor, is that of the Violin Concerto of 1844. This
is a splendid work and the NZSQ put in a fine performance.
The church acoustic will divide opinion; for example my son
found it “veil-like”, whilst my wife much preferred the NZSQ
to the Henschel! It all goes to show that personal taste will
determine in the end … and quite right too! The final movement
brings in a sublime second melody which is more demonstrative
in the “period” performance by The Eroica Quartet (HM). The
sound at the end of the “con fuoca coda” was to my ears slightly unnerving; perhaps an edit!
At budget price
this CD will give a good introduction to the uninitiated and
nobody new to these works should feel short-changed. In a very
competitive marketplace, these recordings would not be my first
choice; please don’t ask me what would be. For newcomers I’d
suggest getting the Henschel’s 3 CD set for no more than £15,
or singly - a great bargain. For those who download I would
strongly recommend Emusic for the excellent Eroica
Quartet recordings. The Melos Quartet still sound splendid
and their set remains one I return to regularly.
In any event do
listen to these works from one of the string quartet’s finest
composers!
David R Dunsmore
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