I have been living with this set for quite 
                  a few weeks now, and must say I have been enjoying it hugely.
                
The Quatuor Sine Nomine, or ‘Quartet with 
                  no name’ have been around since 1975, but are anything but anonymous 
                  in the way they play these works. Their name is symbolic of 
                  the players’ wish to be open to all composers and their works, 
                  and is based in Lausanne.
                
The spread of dates 
                  for the recordings of these works indicates a seriously considered 
                  and long term project rather than a commercially conceived rush 
                  job. With each of the later, greater quartets being distributed 
                  throughout the box and being supplemented with the less well-known 
                  works, we get a nice balance and mix of programmes. All are 
                  recorded in an attractively resonant acoustic except for the 
                  slightly drier museum setting of CD3, which nonetheless suits 
                  well the relative intimacy of much of the music on that disc. 
                  The slimline box is nicely presented, with good sturdy cardboard 
                  sleeves for the discs, and useful if not truly extensive notes 
                  by Brigitte Massin.
                
For comparisons, 
                  I’ve unearthed a set which has been in my collection for an 
                  improbably long time, and I was surprised to find it still available 
                  – that of the Chilingirian Quartet on a Nimbus set of the last 
                  three quartets from 1978. This is of course an analogue recording, 
                  but it still has many fine qualities, and captures the quartet 
                  when the viola player was Simon Rowland-Jones, part of the original 
                  line-up. Listening to their Rosamunde, which also starts 
                  the Sine Nomine set, there is a pleasant sense of freshness 
                  in the playing, but the recording lacks a little in real contrast. 
                  The players have a light enough touch, but in the final reckoning 
                  there is an overall impression of greyness which may have something 
                  to do with that mixed blessing, the Ambisonic technique used 
                  for the original recording. One can listen ‘through’ such shortcomings 
                  and still find much to enjoy, but the favourite which blew it 
                  away for me was that of the Hagen Quartet on DG. Recorded in 
                  1985 in a far more spacious acoustic, the sound quality and 
                  separation of the instruments has a greater attraction and higher 
                  impact, and the Hagens just seem to inhabit the music as if 
                  it was engraved on their instruments by the maker. The balance 
                  provides a greater sense of transparency as well, with melodies 
                  allowed their simple grace without having the accompaniment 
                  stamping too much character on the overall picture. The Quatuor 
                  Sine Nomine makes clearly different choices, and at first one 
                  has to become accustomed to some of the adjustments in balance 
                  and weight. They have a more dramatic approach, and the inner 
                  voices are layered in a way which sometimes favours a more showmanlike 
                  quartet entity over the subtleties of solo balanced against 
                  more restrained counter-melodies and accompaniment. These choices 
                  result in a somewhat higher tension in general, and while there 
                  are moments of repose and quieter reflection, there is an underlying 
                  restlessness which points more towards the troubled Schubert 
                  than the chocolate-box stereotype which some may still carry 
                  as an image of the composer.
                
This is certainly 
                  impressive playing, but it does have an ‘in your face’ quality 
                  which some may not be looking for. Take the dramatic opening 
                  of CD2, where Sine Nomine digs deep in the final String Quartet 
                  in G minor D887. There is plenty of dynamic contrast, but 
                  with high-octane playing of this kind there are likely to be 
                  more rough edges as a payoff, and where the ‘difficult’ passages 
                  kick in it is sometimes a fine balance between high drama and 
                  sharp-edged hacking. No, the members of Sine Nomine are no hacks, 
                  but if you prefer an easier ride in your Schubert it might be 
                  wise to have a quick listen before parting with your hard-earned. 
                  In fact it is more often something of a wonder as to how they 
                  manage to keep it all together so well with such gritty interpretations, 
                  and personally I found myself growing to appreciate these recordings 
                  the more I listened to them. Take the narrative textures of 
                  the second Andante con moto movement of D887: those sustained 
                  high passages and restrained melodic figurations possess a quiet 
                  intensity which is highly modern in character – almost minimalist, 
                  and with glissando like portamenti which sometimes seem 
                  almost to have leapt out of Tavener’s Protecting Veil.
                
Intensity is a quality 
                  which other quartets show of course, and the renowned Busch 
                  Quartet is often held up as an example in this regard. I only 
                  have one example to hand, with a mono 1950 recording of the 
                  String Quartet in B flat major D112 on a 1994 EMI 4 CD 
                  compilation to accompany the major Beethoven quartet recordings. 
                  The Sine Nomine Quartet go even further in terms of contrast, 
                  with the door slammed shut on that lyrical opening in the first 
                  movement even more firmly than with their predecessors. Many 
                  of the aspects of these recordings are however comparable, with 
                  articulation equally clear and detailed. Even taking the limitations 
                  of the Busch Quartet’s old recordings into consideration, it 
                  seems clear to me that Sine Nomine has taken on the Busch’s 
                  baton and brought their muscular and unsentimental tradition 
                  into an even more athletic modern age.
                
It seems a little 
                  unfair to gloss over the earlier works, but rest assured that 
                  these recordings show even the lowest D numbers to be works 
                  undeserving of neglect. The String Quartet in B flat major 
                  D18, the Schubert’s first in this genre, shows the composer 
                  exploring the kinds of worlds he was already making his own 
                  in the multitude of songs on which he had already started as 
                  a precocious teenager. The earlier quartets have plenty of drama, 
                  dissonance and daring in terms of modulation, and the Sine Nomine 
                  Quartet relish every moment.
                
One of the highlights 
                  of any such set has to be the ‘Death and the Maiden’ quartet 
                  D810, and again I was able to re-acquaint myself with the Hagen 
                  Quartet’s 1990 recording for DG, which is couple with the Op.135 
                  quartet of Beethoven. Once again, the Hagens have the edge in 
                  terms of refinement and subtlety, making their dramatic points 
                  from a level of near-silence, something which tells most in 
                  the chilling second movement, the original song (D531) from 
                  which the quartet has its subtitle. Once again, the Sine Nomine 
                  Quartet is more charged and restless, having a greater sense 
                  of forward movement, despite coming in only 20 seconds slower 
                  than the Hagens. Patrick Genet the first violinist has the measure 
                  of the heights in the first variation, and Marc Jaermann manages 
                  to make his cello sound like a viola in the second variation. 
                  There is some roughness in the heavy bowing later on, but this 
                  is all part of the idiom for which you’ll appreciate this set 
                  either to a greater or lesser extent. The Hagen Quartet is lighter 
                  and fleeter of foot in the final Presto - prestissimo, 
                  and come in nearly a minute quicker, though not without some 
                  evidence of crashing here and there, as one or two edits show. 
                  Returning to the young Chilingirian Quartet I now find them 
                  rather leaden-footed in this work in general, and can safely 
                  say that this new Swiss recording stands head and shoulders 
                  above the old Nimbus set, as it will many others.
                
              
As a complete set, 
                this has competition from the reissued set from DG with the Melos 
                quartet, and the more recently recorded Auryn quartet on CPO. 
                There is also the Kodály quartet on separate CDs from Naxos and 
                the Vienna quartet on the Camerata label, but most quartets have 
                concentrated on the ‘great’ quartets, so another complete set 
                of this standard has to be welcome. While the Quatuor Sine Nomine 
                may not represent the summit of all versions available in some 
                of these works, as a complete set this new release has a great 
                deal going for it. I wouldn’t want to be without the Hagen Quartet 
                in Schubert’s later works, but would now be very reluctant to 
                part with this new set. Its qualities are something akin to going 
                for a walk on the beach on a windy winter afternoon – occasionally 
                abrasive on the skin, but certainly bracing and definitely healthy: 
                you’ll certainly feel better after having gone for it!
                
                Dominy Clements