How much difference two or three hundred years have made to the string quartet,
and indeed how much has changed since 1962, when the LaSalle Quartet premiered
Krzystof Penderecki’s
String Quartet No. 1. Josef Haydn might perhaps
have wondered why on earth composers were still using such an antiquated
medium for expressing themselves in such changed times, but if he had heard
the works on this recording he would, no doubt after plucking at his wig
in confounded agitation and declaring that the world had gone mad, have
to admit that this combination of instruments can indeed adapt itself to
almost any compositional idiom. Just as a classic car can do a circuit of
a modern race track and have us on the edge of our seats, so the string
quartet can excite our senses and enrich our lives, and this excellent recording
from the Royal String Quartet brings us into contact with some now classic
examples of what the 20
th century made of its 18
th
century ancestor.
Penderecki’s
String Quartet No. 3 might be the best place to start
when approaching this disc. This relatively recent work is harder to find
on disc than the others, and the Royal String Quartet play it with passion
and verve. Penderecki’s remarkable range of effects and his emotional twists
and turns take us on a roller-coaster ride which ranges from bizarre waltzes,
persistent harmonic pendulums somewhat reminiscent of Shostakovich, and
moments of rare pathos and tenderness. This work appeared 40 years after
the
String Quartet No. 2, and Penderecki’s change to a more romantic
style infuses the third quartet, filling it with points of recognition such
as lyrical melodic lines and urgent rhythmic passages. This in many ways
is the star work of this programme, and the performance on this recording
does justice to the work’s intensity and sheer variety of expression.
Penderecki’s first two string quartets were written amidst Poland’s revolutionary
preoccupation with ‘sonorism’, an approach which broke with traditions of
form and notation, often working with textures and timbres, with fields
of sound and a direct paeans of communication rather than outmoded aesthetics
of harmonic convention and cadence. The Royal String Quartet’s performances
of these earlier works are very good, and if you are more interested in
having this complete set ‘in the bag’ than much else then these recordings
will do very nicely. More has however been said on this music in the past,
and more emphatically.
Competitors in recordings of Penderecki’s string quartets include that on
the DUX label (see
review),
which I unfortunately didn’t have to hand for comparison. The LaSalle Quartet’s
recording of the work they premiered, the
String Quartet No. 1
plus their recording of the Lutoslawski
String Quartet is also
one we need to be aware of (see
review).
This recording originated on the Deutsche Grammophon label, and their performance
of Penderecki’s
String Quartet No. 1 has a closer perspective than
that of the Royal String Quartet, allowing us to feel the sheer physicality
of the strings bending and the air being pounded by the player’s almost
brutal interaction with their instruments. The LaSalle quartet’s timing
is close to that of the Royal String Quartet, but makes a more vivid impression
through digging that much deeper. Penderecki’s first two quartets can also
be found on a Wergo album of his chamber music, WER6258-2, with the Silesian
String Quartet going at his
String Quartet No. 1 with even more
vigour, though set within a big acoustic this can on occasion be a bit aversive
and over the top. The
String Quartet No. 2 in this instance is
genuinely terrifying, and I can only urge you to try it so you can understand
what I mean. I’m afraid the Royal String Quartet is nowhere near as nightmarish.
Going back to the DG/Brilliant Classics comparison, with the Lutoslawski
String Quartet the differences are initially less crucial in the
sparing open spaces of the
Introductory movement, though the LaSalle
players give more of an impression of human voices in the way they communicate
in the second
Main movement, charging at and churning the response
of the listener. The Royal String Quartet is very good, but you never quite
escape the sense of instruments being played strangely, rather than entering
the empty streets of a surreal dream world and encountering a crowd of people
going WAAAAAAAAHHH.
My feeling with this recording is not so much any sense of deficiency in
the playing for the most part, more a lack of daring when it came to the
recording. This is typically magnificent Hyperion production, with keenly
preserved instrumental colour and a fine sense of space in the Potton Hall
acoustic. Where the other recordings mentioned win is in the sheer close-up
and personal way the engineers have presented the music. The ideal-seat
concert hall experience is all very well, but these are the kinds of sounds
which to my mind demand perhaps a few extra microphones, or their placement
perhaps a few inches closer to the players. This need not end up in an artificial
sounding Hi-Fi test disc scenario as the LaSalle recording proves. The sheer
wallop of Penderecki’s
String Quartet No. 1 is just missed here
as a result, though you can tell the players are not holding back. I fear
the Silesian Quartet’s Wergo
String Quartet No. 2 remains one of
my all-time horror recordings, and the Royal String Quartet left me a bit
high and dry by comparison. The Lutoslawski
String Quartet is again
well played, but the sheer personality and characterisation in the LaSalle
recording remains unbeaten.
Dominy Clements
New clothes for 20
th century classics, but is this the real deal?