I’m happy to say – though surprised to find myself writing it 
                given my unhappy experience with previous releases in the series 
                – that this GROC restoration of the Late Quartets is by and large 
                very acceptable indeed.
                
The protagonists 
                  are the Busch, more than which one needs to add little, except 
                  to note – in a hushed, hesitant, rather recusant sort of way 
                  - that not everything written about this august body of recordings 
                  stands up to scrutiny. And admiration, even devotion, to the 
                  spiritual elevation of the Busch way does not invalidate admiration 
                  of other quartets of the time. I appreciate that, for example, 
                  the Léner Quartet’s way is now seen as a rather vibrato-laden, 
                  unintellectual, perhaps generic approach to the cycle of quartets; 
                  in some ways the antipode of the Busch. But these things are 
                  not binary and the Léner recordings still hold a kind of dominion 
                  over my affections whenever I need their powerfully expressive 
                  tonal breadth. The one does not invalidate the other.
                
That said the Abbey 
                  Road recordings were always boxy and they didn’t especially 
                  flatter the Busch’s timbre, corporate or individual. The American-recorded 
                  sides – Op.130 and the Grosse Fuge, in Weingartner’s arrangement 
                  and played by the Busch Chamber Players – are adequate but the 
                  restoration is certainly no improvement over a previous LP transfer 
                  on CBS from way back.
                
The performances 
                  are imbued with the greatest sense of elevation and are amongst 
                  the most famous on record. There are only a few points where 
                  I feel – and have always felt – that Adolf Busch’s veneration 
                  carries him to excess. One is certainly the Molto adagio 
                  of Op.132, a locus classicus of Busch’s long bow – exceeded 
                  by Zimbalist certainly but still a special weapon in Busch’s 
                  violinistic armoury. But not only does the Busch take nearly 
                  twenty minutes over it, but also its heavenly length comes at 
                  a cost of forward momentum and the retardation is, to me, precisely 
                  what the music doesn’t need. The quartet had a tendency to do 
                  this; their New York recording of the slow movement of Op.59 
                  No.2 tended to exemplify the same failing. Their fast tempi 
                  in outer movements, animated by crisp rhythmic drive, is splendidly 
                  conceived however; only occasionally do they render too much 
                  latitude as in Op.132.
                
The other aspect 
                  worth noting in passing is the fallible nature of the Chamber 
                  orchestra recording, which is hardly the last word in scrupulous 
                  attention to detail. In places it’s downright sloppy.
                
There are now a 
                  large number of choices available for these recording. Dutton 
                  is issuing the Busch recordings disc by disc – slightly treble 
                  dampened but smooth; for example the recent release of Op.131 
                  coupled with Op.59. No3 [Dutton CDBP 9773]. Preiser has issued 
                  a two-disc set of Op. 52 No.3 and Opp. 59 No.3, 95, 131 and 
                  132 [90172] (unheard by me). EMI of course, has been active 
                  in a previous Andrew Walter incarnation from 1994 – though these 
                  didn’t include the American recordings [CHS5 65308-2]. Pearl’s 
                  noisier set included Op.95 and the late quartets on three well-filled 
                  discs [GEMS 0053].
                
If you’ve never 
                  heard these recordings and can sort out the problems inherent 
                  in the Busch Beethoven discography – there are a number of works 
                  that have not been collated in one box for various reasons – 
                  then I would recommend this three-disc set, unless you want 
                  to be selective and dip into the Duttons.
                
              
Jonathan Woolf
              
see also Review 
                by Michael Cookson