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Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik

Rezension Ensemble - Magazin für Kammermusik 5-2014 Oktober / November | Robert Nemecek | October 1, 2014 Sinnlich und direkt

Seiner bisherigen Linie folgend kombiniert das Quartetto di Cremona auf der...
Fono Forum

Rezension Fono Forum September 2014 | Marcus Stäbler | September 1, 2014 Eindringlich

Eine gute Balance aus Gefühl und Verstand, aus geistiger Durchdringung und Leidenschaft gehört zu den wichtigsten Schlüsseln für eine zwingende Interpretation. Das Quartetto di Cremona hat ihn gefunden, wie es auch die dritte folge ihrer Einspielung der Beethoven-Streichquartette wieder belegt. Auffällig sind etwa die perfekt getimten Zäsuren innerhalb der Sätze, mit denen das Ensemble die Partitur in ihre Sinnabschnitte gliedert. Diese analytische Klarsicht paart sich mit einem großen Reichtum an Farben, Charakteren und Emotionen. Nehmen wir etwa das Adagio aus op. 59,1, in dem die Streicher einen wehmutsvollen Gesang anstimmen: voller Herzenswärme und edlem Klang, aber ganz intim. Trotz der mitunter orchestralen Anmutung der Musik – mit der Beethoven die Gattung Streichquartett an der Wende zum 19. Jahrhundert aus der privaten Kammer in den öffentlichen Konzertsaal führte – wahrt das Quartetto di Cremona einen innigen Ton und spielt fein nuanciert. Auch im frühen op. 18,4: Der Mittelteil des Andante lebt etwa von subtilen Farbunterschieden zwischen einem weichen und einem etwas kernigeren Piano.

Viel schroffer dagegen die Kontraste in der "Großen Fuge", die vom vibratolosen Flüstern bis zu explosiven Attacken eine gewaltige Spanne aufreißt. Hier geht das Ensemble immer wieder an die Grenzen des traditionellen Schönklangs – ganz im Sinne von Beethovens vielleicht verstörendstem Spätwerk, in dem die Extreme auf die Spitze getrieben sind. Auch dort finden die Italiener die richtige Mischung aus Kontrolle und Hingabe – und fördern die existenzielle Dringlichkeit der Musik zutage.
Gramophone

Rezension Gramophone August 2014 | Harriet Smith | August 1, 2014 I got my first taste of the Quartetto di Cremona in a survey of Beethoven...

I got my first taste of the Quartetto di Cremona in a survey of Beethoven chamber music last summer. Now they've reached Vol 3 of the quartets and the qualities that were apparent then are just as abundant here, I particularly like the way they combine early, middle and Iate Beethoven: it sets up fascinating tensions and counterpoints. Their opening of the Grosse Fuge is a reminder that this is one of the greatest of all gauntlet- throwing-down gestures in music. It's immensely ballsy playing, sweaty, almost anarchic in the sense of it almost coming apart at the seams in the AIIegro proper. This is emphasised by Audite's immediate recording (the Lindsays sound deliberate by comparison). Many others are more polished - not least the Takács, while the Talich have a wonderful clarity - but this is a thrilling ride, even if timbre suffers at times. The extraordinary opening of Op 59 No I needs, to my mind, to begin almost midstream: the Talcics are spot-on, and their mix of elegance, energy and precision is very alluring. The Quartetto di Cremona are that bit more impatient: it's no surprise that this spacious movement is highly emotive, tremulous even. The Artemis tread a convincing middle ground, while the Takács, who seem almost frozen with grief at the outset, create one of the most intense readings of all. The Cremona's finale, though, is wonderfully energetic, the players ripping into the accents with real glee. If you're a fun of the recent Belcea account of Op 18 No 4, chances are you won't much like this. The pent-up emotion that characterises that account has no place here, particularly in the sliding, slewing Minuet, which is energetic and humorous; the very focused finale of the Belcea strikes me as a little po-faced; the Hagen, with a not dissimilar approach, find more light and shade; but the Cremona's appeal lies in their reactivity and playfulness. Performances of great personality, then; not benchmarks but an exciting addition to the shelves nonetheless.
International Record Review

Rezension International Record Review September 2014 | Michael Jameson | September 1, 2014 Each volume of this evolving Beethoven quartet cycle from the Quartetto di...

Each volume of this evolving Beethoven quartet cycle from the Quartetto di Cremona usefully encompasses works from all three creative phases of the composer's life. Nowhere else in his oeuvre, save perhaps in the piano sonatas, can the listener experience at first hand Beethoven's novel technical and expressive advances being brought into such sharp relief across a range of works in a Single genre.

With this new SACD release, Volume in Audite's series , that creative evolution and attendant polarization of form and ideas seems even more startling than before. The reason for this is no t hard to determine; the programme combines the tersely belligerent C minor Quartet from the Op. 18 group with the Grosse Fuge and the first of the middle period 'Razumovsky' Quartets, Op. 59. It would be hard to cherry-pick a more challenging or more representative group from among Beethoven's quartets, making this compilation particularly appealing, one imagines, to anybody for whom these works might still be terra incognita.

However, so far, this series has had mixed fortunes. Variable performances from the Cremona Quartet haven't always lived up to the expectations their heritage seems to have conferred upon them, as perceived successors to the illustrious Quartetto ltaliano. Consequently in an already oversubscribed field, these accounts probably won't be the ones most of us would choose to live with, despite much that's entirely praiseworthy: the highlight here is an ardent account of Op. 59 No. 1 that seems to me to be the finest individual performance I've heard so far in the Cremona Quartet's cycle.

The C minor Quartet, Op. 18 No. 4, owes much to the minor-key works of Haydn, in particular to the second in the Op. 76 set, the D minor Quartet popularly known as the 'Fifths'. Speeds are invigorating; and with bristling attack and mercurial Mediterranean passions simmering away, this was always going to be an exciting account! Yet there are moments which don't quite come off, particularly in the Andante, and the tiered dynamics and syncopated abruptness of the Menuetto find these players in less than full accord, though the finale goes very well indeed.

In the Grosse Fuge climaxes are reached too soon, motorically and expressively, and amid this torrential onrush, the team begins to flag well before the music has run its course. This proved a considerable disappointment, particularly when compared to the superlative account from the Belcea Quartet, whose visionary playing of all these works has raised the bar in the interpretation of the Beethoven string quartets by several notches in the recent past.

Finally things begin to go well, however, and the Quartetto di Cremona ends Volume 3 of its Beethoven cycle in fine style, with a thoroughly assured performance of the first 'Razumovsky' Quartet. If the playing cannot match the overall tonal cohesion of the Belceas, this is a solidly reliable reading nonetheless, which ticks most, though not quite all, of the right boxes. The biggest problem you'll detect at the outset is the somewhat anonymous character of the playing. Certainly the opening movement goes well for the most part, though the cello's introduction of the 'Eroica'-like first subject seems to lack something in presence and character, whereas the Belceas sound altogether more intrepid and purposeful. The Cremonas need time really to find their feet here, but when they do, there's crisply alert ensemble playing and a genuinely convincing sense of teamwork which hasn't always been so much in evidence previously.

The pointed Scherzo hasn't quite the metrical rigour of the Belceas' version, and dynamics are not so strongly attenuated, but this impression may well derive from the recording, made in a fairly reverberant auditorium, than to any particular shortcomings in the playing itself. The slow movement brings moments of heart-rending expressivity, however, and these players are at their impressive best when they allow the music to unfold at its own natural pace; the transition into the Russian•inspired finale, one of the most dangerous and unpredictable passages in Op. 59 No. 1, is nicely managed too.

Audite's production is never sonically the equal of Zig-Zag's exceptional Belcca Quartet recordings, but the sound is bright and well balanced. With Michael Struck-Schloen's informative booklet notes to hand, this is much the best disc in this series to date.

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