Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
String Quartet No.12 in C minor D703 Quartettsatz [6:16]
String Quartet No.13 in A minor D804 Rosamunde [34:16]
String Quartet No.14 in D minor D810 Death and the Maiden [36:22]
String Quartet No.15 in G D887 [45:10]
Guarneri Quartet (Arnold Steinhardt, John Dalley (violins); Michael Tree (viola);
David Soyer (cello))
rec. 1971 (13); 7 April, 19 May 1976 (14); 29 April, 2, 19 May 1977 (12&15),
New York USA. ADD. Stereo
NEWTON CLASSICS 8802089 [71:38 + 51:26]
Distinguished and refined artists they may be, but the Guarneri’s performances
here left me cold. “A common grayness silvers every thing”; these
are the blandest accounts I have ever heard of some of the most impassioned
and unsettling music ever written. I turned to a variety of competitive versions
to substantiate my first impressions. Sure enough, whether it was the nuanced
Romanticism of the Juilliard, the razor-sharp attack of the Takács, the
mercurial sensitivity of the Tokyo or the melodious propulsiveness of the Kodály,
all those quartets left the Guarneri in the dust no matter which of the four
works here I sampled.
I marvelled at how it is possible to command such technical expertise yet fail
to respond to the bitter-sweet beauty and melancholy undercurrents of Schubert’s
music; these accounts just jog-trot along. The Allegro movements which open
both D804 and D887 are hopelessly compromised by the listless tempo adopted;
they are indeed marked “ma non troppo” and “molto moderato”
respectively but that is surely no invitation to stroll. “Allegro moderato”
isn’t as much about tempo as inner tension and phrasing but the Guarneri
play as if they are unaware of the need to remind the listener that Schubert’s
music so often had its roots in dance rhythms.
Matters pick up a little in the famous Quartettsatz but for some reason
this recording emphasises a kind of nasal, muted tone to Arnold Steinhardt’s
first violin and the harsh, blaring quality of the sound as a whole vitiates
any appreciation of this, the most committed performance in the two disc set.
Having said that, the Tokyo Quartet bring far more passion to it. The homogeneity
and security of the Guarneri may easily be admired but such qualities are as
nought when compromised by indifferent sound and music-making far too comfortable
for its own good. Dynamic shading is lazy, too: everything is in tune and properly
co-ordinated but it’s all so unengaging.
The Guarneri do not take any repeats, presumably because they have so few ideas
about how to enliven the music that any repetition would merely underline their
interpretative vacuity.
There is little magic in these humdrum performances and so many highly competitive
and vastly superior alternative accounts to be had that this re-issue by Newton
need not detain you.
Ralph Moore
This re-issue need not detain you.