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			Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)  
  String Quintet in C Major, D 956 1828 [54:55]  
              String Quartet in C minor, Quartettsatz D 703 1820 [9:06] 
               
             
            Takács Quartet (Edward Dusinberre (violin I); Károly Schranz
(violin
  II); Geraldine Walther (viola); András Fejér (cello)); Ralph
Kirshbaum 
  (cello) (quintet)
 
			  rec. 18-21 May, 2012, Concert Hall, Wyastone Estate, Monmouth, UK. DDD
 
                
              HYPERION CDA67864    [63:43]   
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                  The sleeve-notes for an LP of the recording by the Weller Quartet 
                  (1958-1969) made the plausible claim that the slow movement 
                  of Schubert's String Quintet in C Major D 956 was the most beautiful 
                  music ever written.  
                     
                  Written in the summer of 1828, the year in which Schubert died, 
                  it is indeed a heart-rending work throughout. Full of luscious 
                  harmonies and lingering melodic good taste, it's a quartet that's 
                  enriched by the addition of a second cello - after the fashion 
                  of Boccherini, though for very different reasons. This adds 
                  not only weight, in the lower registers, but also depth … 
                  and melancholy; or at least reflection.  
                     
                  It's thoughtfulness, introspection and care that the Takács 
                  and Ralph Kirshbaum bring to this highly recommendable new recording 
                  on Hyperion. It follows the Takács’ highly praised 
                  first CD (CDA30019) in the series: Death and the Maiden 
                  and Rosamunde quartets. Theirs is also very disciplined 
                  playing; though it lacks nothing in emotion, warmth or immediacy. 
                   
                     
                  One of the ways which they achieve this focus is through a careful, 
                  yet entirely spontaneous, balance between their vivid and compelling 
                  ensemble playing and the instruments' individual rich sounds. 
                  This can be heard, for instance, in the cellos in that same 
                  slow movement's development section [tr.2]. It’s there 
                  too in the almost stuttering, faltering violin sound at two 
                  minutes into the allegretto [tr.4]. Then you realise that you've 
                  been listening to the fullness of the other strings all along. 
                   
                     
                  There is also a great deal of dynamic variety: louder passages 
                  stand out because those where delicacy occurs - not reserve, 
                  or mere 'pause' in the volume; but delicacy - present a very 
                  purposeful contrast. Similarly, the less subdued passages (ten 
                  minutes into the same long adagio [tr.2]) are all the more potent 
                  because they do not always equate faster tempi with increased 
                  dynamic.  
                     
                  The overall effect is almost like that of hearing the music 
                  as it is being written. This is not an easy immediacy to sustain: 
                  the third, second and first movements of D 956 last 10½, 
                  14½ and almost 20 minutes respectively. To listen repeatedly 
                  to the Takács' account is to be struck by a freshness 
                  that can only originate in great familiarity and love for the 
                  music. The themes of Schubert's C Major are likely to be very 
                  familiar to most music-lovers. That said, time and again the 
                  Takács offer a new angle, shine a novel light on the 
                  music's rich and contrasting colours. In this C Major's scherzo, 
                  which in turns hurries, holds back and questions, the gap between 
                  high and low strings - from the fifth minute [tr.3] on, for 
                  instance - expresses a probing, an inquisitiveness almost, that 
                  we might take as one last doubt by the composer about his place 
                  in the musical world. After all, within two months of writing 
                  D956, Schubert was dead.  
                     
                  The Takács' is not an interpretation designed to illuminate 
                  Schubert's biography. It starts and ends with the music. It 
                  is just that the music contains so much that is human and personal. 
                  It seems to be pulling us gently and by degrees out of ourselves; 
                  and doing even that slightly ahead of any awareness which this 
                  sinuous playing affords us of the process. Again, the players 
                  achieve this sense of direction by rigour and perception: there 
                  are reasons for a rallentando here and a crescendo there. It's 
                  all too easy to overplay Schubert's crescendos; but not once 
                  do the Takács do so.  
                     
                  As is often said of Schubert's life generally, contrasting and 
                  even opposing emotions follow one another to create moods of 
                  real ambiguity. This is often in quick musical succession. It's 
                  hard for players possessing other than great competence and 
                  insight to give such apparently contradictory phrasing its head, 
                  and be left with any real meaning.  
                     
                  These players - the Takács was founded in 1975 in Hungary 
                  - can and do. The end of D 956 is a case in point. In terms 
                  of form and recapitulation, the movement might appear to falter, 
                  to have lost its way. The Takács quartet play it with 
                  the understanding that every thesis has its antithesis; and 
                  that the shifts, sweeps and pulls inward (in the third quarter, 
                  for example [tr.4]) all make perfect sense.  
                     
                  They do so because the Takács are aware of the work's 
                  architecture, of Schubert's ability to - even his penchant for 
                  - delay; he remembers or foreshadows a goal by hiding it. So 
                  it is that the finale of the piece is so effective. Indeed it 
                  illuminates everything that has gone before - through tonality, 
                  drive and poise. This is sustained right to the very end, in 
                  fact. The final two notes of all are not stamped out, not 'planted' 
                  regardless; nor are they left to emerge. They are played - almost 
                  simultaneously - because so to do truly provides a conclusion. 
                  Rigour again: the work is also about form. Through structure 
                  emerges emotional meaning.  
                     
                  The Allegro is the only movement of a quartet (D 703) which 
                  Schubert had begun in 1820 and abandoned. He was probably either 
                  dissatisfied with its form; or still unable to emerge from the 
                  shadow of Beethoven; or both. It was not uncommon for Schubert 
                  to write and forget, to fail to see publication, performance 
                  or payment through. He also had a scathing opinion of the quartets 
                  he had written in his own youth.  
                     
                  D 703 is a remarkable work: taut, focused, energetic and full 
                  of impulse. These are the qualities that a good performance 
                  will emphasise. Not its existence as a 'torso'. Indeed, Brahms 
                  considered the Quartettsatz (Quartet Movement) as valid 
                  and valuable piece as the Unfinished Symphony. That's 
                  how the Takács approach it.  
                     
                  Lasting just under ten minutes, it has time to breathe and to 
                  promise; but not spread. The Takács start with a pace 
                  and attack that seem difficult to maintain when you first hear 
                  them. It's a risk. Not hurrying, still less scurrying, their 
                  approach has pace, excitement and concern. Not a nuance is missed. 
                  Not a shading of colour or insight glossed over. Once again 
                  each of the five strings makes its way. The pressure which they 
                  seem to apply to one another, the joint commitment, somehow 
                  blend into a tight ball of energy: rubber not wool. It’s 
                  a textured rubber that's interesting to smell, see and even 
                  taste as much as to touch. The music is alive and present. It 
                  doesn't kick or scream but it can't be ignored.  
                     
                  The musicians are as aware of the ways to communicate emotion 
                  in this short fragment as they are in D 956. Even so, the Takács' 
                  playing is not all directed merely towards eliciting an emotional 
                  response. Three other qualities are foremost in their work with 
                  both pieces. They draw out the beautiful in Schubert's writing. 
                  They calmly offer a quiet and professional, rather than enthusiastic, 
                  dedication to what must be our best guess as to Schubert's original 
                  intentions in writing chamber music; and our understanding of 
                  how it would have been played - had it been heard during Schubert's 
                  lifetime. There’s an understanding here of the tensions 
                  between whatever intensely personal expression the composer 
                  needed and the self-consciousness of Biedermeier Vienna. Add 
                  to this a grace that enables almost everything else to be so 
                  successful.  
                     
                  The acoustic is close: not too reverberant for this approach 
                  to work well. So you are drawn to the music, not the musicians. 
                  The booklet and presentation of the CD are well up to Hyperion's 
                  usual standards. In a crowded catalogue of these works with 
                  several dozen recommendable accounts this quickly earns its 
                  place in the top few thanks to a considered and winning mix 
                  of technique and taste.  
                     
                  Mark Sealey   
                   
                  Masterwork Index: String quintet ~~ String 
                  quartets 
                  
     
      
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