This is US-based Carpe Diem Quartet's third instalment
of their recording of the complete string quartets of Sergey Taneyev
(see review of
volume
2).
The numbering of Taneyev's quartets is somewhat problematic, as the
track-listing for this CD suggests. Only two movements of what would
have been his first quartet were finished, then three complete works
followed, before an 'official' no.1 was published as the composer's
op.4. Four more were then published in sequence with an opus number.
No.6, completed in 1905, was the last to receive one (op.19), after
which Taneyev concentrated on other traditional chamber forms, until
in 1911 he began a final string quartet - only to break off after two
movements. In concrete terms, then, the quartet numbered '5' is actually
Taneyev's eighth, whilst the one labelled here as 'no.7' is his first
completed quartet.
Taneyev was a true intellectual, with Tolstoy and Rimsky-Korsakov among
his closest friends, and also an ascetic - a rare Russian teetotaller!
In his article on the composer in
New Grove, David Brown has
him down as a dry academic, describing him as "the antithesis of Glinka,
for whereas the latter was possessed of a powerful and vivid imagination
but was deficient in technique, Taneyev had little imaginative endowment
but commanded a compositional skill unsurpassed by any Russian composer
of his period." Brown is wrong in so many ways, but as far as Taneyev
is concerned it is better to accept that he was no Beethoven but then
to feast on the marvellous craftsmanship, intimate lyricism and show-stopping
counterpoint of his string quartets. In that respect, there is no better
place to start than with the youthfully effervescent 'Seventh' and the
elegant, Classically-inspired Fifth.
The Carpe Diem Quartet are well known, in America at least, for their
genre-crossing tendencies - their "musical passion has led them down
the paths of gypsy, tango, folk, pop, rock, and jazz-inspired music".
However, a strong case can be made for the thesis that quartet greatness
is not possible if time and energy are dissipated on facile arrangements
of music from lower levels. What PR calls 'breaking the mould' or 'pushing
the limits' is really nothing more than sitting comfortably in a musical
onesie to sell more tickets and CDs.
Nevertheless, whilst never sounding truly impassioned, and certainly
not Russian, the Carpe Diems display a good deal of poise and commitment
to Taneyev's deserving cause. For this cycle they go
mano a mano
with the Taneyev Quartet, whose late-1970s recordings of their eponym's
quartets can be had on five volumes on the Russian Northern Flowers
label. Though in splendidly remastered sound, the Taneyev's cycle is
not as authoritative as might be expected - see
review
of vol.5 for details. Nor are the Northern Flowers discs competitive
on price. Overall, then, the Carpe Diem Quartet's set is the one to
have. Audio quality is very good in its way - albeit dry and not ideal
for claustrophobes - and Anastasia Belina-Johnson's booklet notes are
interesting and well written.
By way of curious footnote, the Quartet have, since this recording,
acquired a new second violin and cellist - the same positions having
changed between volumes 2 and 3. Second violin also changed between
the first and second volumes. By volume 4, at least nine different musicians
will be available for the collector to enjoy!
Byzantion
Contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk
The Carpe Diem Quartet's set is the one to have.