Firstly a caveat. Too many of the Sony Essential Classics carry 
        minimal or non-existent recording details. The provenance therefore of 
        this double set, mired in the well-worn small type phrase "consists 
        of previously released material" is a little murky – so I’m forced 
        to guess 1980-83. [see footnote] 
         
        
Listening recently to a performance of Death and the 
          Maiden by the Calvet Quartet, a recording made in the 1930s, one of 
          beautiful tone and heavily restrained dramatic outline, forced consideration 
          as to the changing nature of Schubert Quartet interpretation over the 
          last eighty years. From a kind of nuanced sweetness to outsize, almost 
          schizophrenic violence the Quartets have absorbed all interpretations. 
          If performances have become increasingly more visceral over the decades 
          then it can fairly be said that the Juilliard stand centrally in the 
          tradition of elevated Schubert players. They are tonally warm, structurally 
          cogent, dramatic without melodrama, and lyrical without becoming sentimental. 
          They are especially good in the Quartettsatz, so often taken for granted, 
          and in the Rosamunde Quartet here, due to timing exigencies, regrettably 
          split between the two CDs. The big G Major receives a commensurately 
          big performance lasting forty-four minutes – and not sounding it, so 
          agile are the rhythmic subtleties, so understanding the playing. 
        
 
        
The affecting simplicity of the opening of Death and 
          the Maiden – note Samuel Rhodes’ energetically incisive viola – is a 
          great pleasure as is the unease and coalescing confidence of the second 
          movement. The Juilliard manage to convey strata of depth by the most 
          simple and elegant of means and if this is not a performance to rank 
          with the greatest – amongst whom still sits the Busch – then it must 
          take an honoured and worthy place amongst the finer performances committed 
          to disc. Sound quality is good and notes to the point. 
        
 
        
        
Jonathan Woolf 
         
        
        
Footnote from Martin Walker
        
I don't know for sure about "Death 
          & the Maiden",which was certainly around as an LP in the early 
          70s, but the A minor & the G major, which have long been available 
          in Germany both as LP & CD, were recorded in 1962, not the 80s, 
          unless the Juillards made another later recording of the Schubert quartets, 
          which I doubt. 
          Martin