Reviewing the companion 
                disc with the first three quartets from 
                Op. 2 (Naxos 8.554696) (review) 
                I expressed my delight at both the playing 
                and the music itself. These quartets 
                have been unplayed and unheard for far 
                too long. The delight is undiminished 
                after hearing this sequel, played with 
                a freshness of tone and approach and 
                an almost nonchalant elegance that is 
                really infectious. 
              
 
              
In his day Pleyel was 
                revered as one of the foremost contemporary 
                composers. His present day reputation 
                rests mainly on his activities as a 
                piano manufacturer and on the concert 
                hall in Paris, carrying his name, Salle 
                Pleyel. 
              
 
              
Contrary to the norm 
                of the time - read Haydn - most of his 
                quartets are three-movement structures, 
                the only exception being the E flat 
                major quartet on this disc. The Allegro 
                first movement starts and ends with 
                a few dark chords but in between the 
                movement is filled with vitality and 
                light. The second movement, Adagio, 
                is decidedly elegiac in character, hardly 
                moving at all during the first three 
                minutes; then, after a long pause, it 
                takes a new direction but the whole 
                movement is one of sighs. The following 
                minuet has an almost rustic charm, far 
                from the artificial staterooms where 
                the string quartets belonged. It is 
                frustratingly short, just 1:23, but 
                the positive atmosphere is retained 
                in the energetic Allegro assai, 
                superbly played as with the rest of 
                the quartet. 
              
 
              
The quartet in B flat 
                major is also one that revives the spirits. 
                The Allegro is light and springy, 
                dominated by the first violin, the Andante 
                cantabile is a sunny idyll and the 
                concluding Rondo: Grazioso dances 
                and smiles. No conflicts here and it 
                ends with a joyful accelerando. 
              
 
              
The D major quartet 
                is also high-spirited music but the 
                Allegro has some streaks of melancholy. 
                It is worth noticing how inventively 
                Pleyel "orchestrates" the 
                music. There is a charmingly melodic 
                Allegretto that almost cries 
                out for a suitable text. The melody 
                is then elaborated in a series of most 
                inventive variations. The quartet, and 
                the whole set, is then rounded off with 
                a brief Presto movement, played 
                attacca. The four instruments gallop 
                along like four eager Ascot horses abreast. 
              
 
              
An utterly stimulating 
                issue, like its forerunner, excellently 
                recorded by Norbert Kraft and Bonnie 
                Silver. The liner notes, by Allan Badley, 
                are identical with the ones for volume 
                one and could preferably have been a 
                little more explicit about each of the 
                quartets. On the other hand this is 
                music that explains itself, so why bother. 
                This is music for happy listening. 
              
Göran Forsling 
                
              
 
              
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