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[ Audite SACD / Hybrid SACD ]
Release Date: Friday 25 March 2016
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Audite's fifth volume of the Complete Beethoven String Quartets presents not only the Op. 132 String Quartet but also Beethoven's only original String Quintet. Lawrence Dutton, the viola player of the Emerson String Quartet, joins the Quartetto di Cremona.
Mozart left six string quintets to the music world, Louis Spohr's work catalogue contains seven, whilst Luigi Boccherini completed around 120. Beethoven had three quintets published; however, only one of these was originally conceived for string quintet. However, his opus 29 of 1801 is a true masterwork on the brink between the Classical style of his teacher, Joseph Haydn, and the revolutionary idiom of Beethoven's middle and late periods. The Adagio (with its adjunct of "molto espressivo") in particular heralds an evocative intensity which was still foreign in Beethoven's earlier works. However, by his late oeuvre of the 1820s - the Ninth Symphony, 'Missa solemnis', late piano sonatas and quartets - Beethoven had developed such a distinctive language that the label of 'Early Romanticism' no longer applies. His String Quartet in A minor, Op. 132, with its five movements and exceptional degree of difficulty also stands apart from contemporary works; then as now, only professional ensembles could tackle this grandly conceived colossus. As in the quintet, the Molto adagio represents the core of the piece. Its title - "Holy song of thanksgiving of a convalescent to the Deity" - refers to an illness from which the composer had recovered, and adapts a chant inspired by the Renaissance composer Palestrina. In so doing, Beethoven includes a musical ancestor in his quartet whilst making a religious avowal.
"Recording the Beethoven strings quartets is a rite of passage for any quartet. The Italian Quartetto di Cremona, still young but together a good decade, has reached that point...the reason to choose this disc is for the other work: the rarely heard String Quintet in C Op 29...The group's Italianate grace comes into its own in this radiant music" (The Guradian)
"They play with fervour and flair. If at times in the monumental Op 132 in A minor you long for a degree more weight, more digging into the soil than skittering in the air, the reason to choose this disc is for the other work: the rarely heard String Quintet in C Op 29, with a second viola, Lawrence Dutton, as fifth player. The group's Italianate grace comes into its own in this radiant music, with its lyrical opening, heartfelt Adagio, blithe Scherzo and fly-away Presto." (The Observer)
"This is the most exciting new disc of string quartet playing that I have come across for a long time" (BBC Music Chamber Choice of the Month March 2016)
String Quintet in C major, Op. 29
String Quartet No. 15 in A minor, Op. 132