Franz Schubert
String Quintet, String Quartets in G & D minor; Death And the Maiden
String Quintet in C D956 with
Valentin Erben – cello
String Quartet No.15 in G D887
String Quartet No.14 in D Minor D810
Belcea Quartet
Review By Phil Gold
There can
never be a definitive version of Hamlet
because it is open to so many profound interpretations that a single performance
cannot encompass all its elements. It is the product of such a creative mind
that it continues to provide inspiration to this day. So it is with
Beethoven's late quartets, Mozart's operas and a number of other
transcendent musical compositions.
Into this limited category of sublime music we
must certainly add Schubert's String Quintet, perhaps the greatest single
composition of all time, and the one that pianist Arthur Rubinstein said he
would like to hear on his deathbed. The String Quartets in G and D Minor that
preceded the Quintet in that most creative period near the end of his short life
will also stake their claim for inclusion. These works have been recorded many
times of course, and we all have our own favorites. Yours may include perhaps
Stern, Schneider, Katims, Casals and Tortelier for the Quintet (recorded at the
Prades Festival in mono) and the Quatetto Italiano for Death
and the Maiden. Both of these classic performances are well over 40
years old now, and many will prefer higher fidelity recordings by the Alban Berg
Quartet, the Melos Quartet or the Lindsays.
The Belcea Quartet then is up against formidable
competition with this bargain-priced two-disc set. This 2009 recording finds the
players close in age to Schubert in his miraculous late period. First violin
Corina Belcea was born in 1975, second violin Laura Samuel in 1976, violist
Krzyzstof Chorzelski in 1971 and cellist Antoine Lederlin in 1975, which puts
them all in the thirties. Belcea, Samuel and Chorzelski founded the Belcea
Quartet at the Royal College of Music in 1994 along with cellist Alastair Tait,
and they were coached by the Chilingirian Quartet and later the Alban Berg
Quartet, both ensembles steeped in the world of Schubert. What do they bring to
this repertoire?
I am struck by the bold and expansive conception
of this familiar music. It sounds almost larger than life. They take significant
risks by pushing the limits of volume and tempo. This music is nothing if not
all-enveloping from the emotional viewpoint, and the Belcea never push beyond
the bounds of good taste and into virtuosity for its own sake, a criticism that
has been made for example of the Emerson Quartet. The ensemble playing is
immaculate and they bring a wonderful sonority to their performance that suits
the music perfectly. They are aided in this by the splendid acoustics of their
favorite recording venue, Potton Hall in Suffolk, England, and by the excellent
work of recording engineer Arne Akselberg, technical engineer Richard Hale and
producer John Fraser. We are placed in close proximity to the players. We can
even hear breathing at times, although not as obtrusively as on some other
recordings. As truly excellent the sound is for its time on the Quartetto
Italiano recordings, and as natural the acoustic on the Lindsays box or the
Chilingirian set from the late 80's or the Alban Berg Quintet recording from
the early 80's, this present recording is in a different class for
instrumental color, dynamics and level of detail.
While I am blown away by the white-hot
performances here, I don't believe the Belcea Quartet penetrates quite to the
heart of the music in the way that the Lindsays do in their box set [Sanctuary
Classics CD RSB403] which also includes the Quartettsatz D703, the A Minor
Quartet D804 and an early work, the Quartet in B flat D112. The Lindsays seem to
have a more natural way with the phrasing in contrast to the sometimes
deliberate construction we hear from the Belcea, and their partnership with
Douglas Cummings in the Quintet is simply beyond reproach. Here we experience
all the power and poetry of the Casals classic in much better sound. If I could
only have one version it would be the Lindsays, but what a sad world it would be
if I could not also have the Casals version of the Quintet, and also of the two
Schubert Piano Trios which also show the integrity and nobility of Casals in
full measure. I will also treasure this new version for its revelations of the
complexity and cohesion of these works. The Quintet is very moving here and
while the Death and the Maiden
quartet pulls at the heartstrings in no uncertain manner, it is the Quartet in G
which finds the musicians at their most creative, proving it equal in stature to
the better-known quartet.
The Chilingirian Quartet [Nimbus NI 5048/9] lack
full animation in this music and their recording does not match what they were
able to achieve in Mozart. The Melos Quartet provides a much more serious
challenge. They too are youthful and energetic in their 6CD box set [DG 463 151
2]. The playing is more direct than most rivals and may not penetrate quite so
deeply, but it is unfailingly alive and immaculately performed. The Quartetto
Italiano [Philips 446 1632 Duo] are perhaps the most naturally gifted of all in
these late quartets, combing a mature understanding with power and grace in
equal measure. It just sounds right, perfectly judged. The Lindsays' box
surpasses the Italians not in quality but in quantity. They include the Quintet,
which no music lover should be without.
Since this recording another personnel change has
occurred in the Belcea Quartet, with Axel Schacher replacing Laura Samuel as
second violin. For an interesting perspective on what it is like for a string
quartet to replace a founding member, I can strongly recommend the new film A
Late Quartet starring Christopher Walken, Katherine Keener, Yaron
Zilberman and Philip Seymour Hoffman. It concentrates on Beethoven's Quartet
in C# Major Opus 131, which the Belcea are presenting on their current tour.
I enjoyed this set greatly, and I'm looking forward to
hearing them in live performance at the earliest opportunity. Along with the
Jerusalem Quartet, they represent the very best in string quartets to have come
along in the last twenty years, all the more important as some major string
quartets have recently disbanded (e.g. The Lindsays) or are about to (e.g. the
Tokyo).
Performances:
Enjoyment:
Sound Quality: