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Juan Crisóstomo
de ARRIAGA (1806-1826)
String Quartet No. 1 in D minor (published 1824) [24:19]
String Quartet No. 2 in A major (published 1824) [24:08]
String Quartet No. 3 in E flat major (published 1824) [27:10]
Prima Vista
Quartet
rec. National Philharmonic Theatre, Stanisławów,
October 2006
DUX 0577 [76:37]
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His pitifully early death has rendered Arriaga forever one of
the great what-ifs of nineteenth century music. His quartets so
clearly breathe the classical air of Vienna, and are so deeply
and richly imbued with the spirit of Haydn and Mozart that it
can be easy to pass over those moments of Iberian cosmopolitanism
that do surface in these three works. All were published in 1824,
two years before his demise. Arriaga wrote these three quartets
when he was seventeen.
For all that it
would be hard to make out a case for their untrammelled greatness.
They are gracious and engaging but not always vested with great
individuality and do sometimes plough formulae that would, later
in his life perhaps, not serve his needs so easily. The D minor
is a generous work, though, high on primus inter pares pleasures
for the first violin in the Adagio and sporting some nice rather
angular phrasing and folkloric hues in the Minuet. Fortunately
the Polish Prima Vista Quartet has been very warmly recorded
in the National Philharmonic Theatre in Stanisławów. They
deal with the sternly expressive slow movement and coalesce
the material well. The Minuet for example is not over-laced
with vitamins as it can sometimes be – the pizzicati and string
accompaniment figures are measured and malleable.
The Second Quartet
is the most Classical of the three, owing more to Haydn than
its confreres. The motoric start is well conveyed and inner
voices are always audible. The formally clear and well laid
out second movement Theme with variations is played with verve
and a pleasing amount of Haydnesque wit; the pizzicati here
are especially good. Capricious dialogues and exchanges illuminate
the same quartet’s Minuet. The Third Quartet is fluent, fluid
and timbrally interesting and by some way the best and most
important of the three. He manages to fuse his material with
greater fluidity and character. Note the viola’s delightfully
airy first movement melody, the mood-changing and colouristic
Pastorale with its passing storm panel strongly accented and
characterised. The finale is nicely shaped though maybe it’s
not quite agitato enough; I’ve heard more urgent performances.
Nevertheless these
are convincing and highly effective, clearly affectionate performances.
I prefer the Prima Vista to the edgier Camerata Boccherini on
Naxos 8.557628 who offer an identical programme but do take
overall just that much faster tempi. Irrespective my choice
is this Dux one.
Jonathan Woolf
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