Schubert composed his final string quartet 
                    during 1826, and it appropriate that this masterpiece should 
                    be positioned at the threshold of his wonderful last phase. 
                    Yet he was still in his twenties when he wrote it. The G major 
                    Quartet is wholly original in style, in its adaptation of 
                    the tradition of the Viennese classical style inherited from 
                    Haydn and Mozart. Moreover the music has an ambition and spirituality 
                    which link its outlook to that of the late Beethoven quartets 
                    with which it is contemporary.  
                  If this is one of the finest examples of 
                    Schubert’s mastery as a composer of chamber music, so too 
                    the performance of the Kodály Quartet is a fine example of 
                    interpretation and performances. Aided by one of the best 
                    and most ambient recordings to have come from the Naxos Budapest 
                    connection, this splendid disc can be recommended with the 
                    utmost enthusiasm.
                  The G major Quartet is an ambitious piece, 
                    not least because it boldly occupies a span of some 45 minutes, 
                    as an example of Schubert’s ‘Heavenly length’. This clearly 
                    puts demands upon the performers in terms of sustaining interest 
                    through the quality and intensity of their playing, and these 
                    demands are triumphantly met.
                  The slow movement alternates between peace 
                    and turmoil, and the balance within the single construction 
                    is achieved through transitions which are most effectively 
                    handled. The shadings of dynamic are crucial throughout, and 
                    the recording allows these to be satisfactorily made, without 
                    any unnatural emphasis or changes of focus.
                  The outer sections of the scherzo third 
                    movement have a lightness of touch that suggests Mendelssohn, 
                    for this is true ‘fairy music’. If the central trio, with 
                    its peasant ländler music, is less inspired, it does serve 
                    as a useful foil. The dance characteristic carries over into 
                    the finale, in which the Kodály players infuse the lively 
                    tarantella rhythm with the sparkle and wit of opera buffa.
                  This G major String Quartet was the last 
                    such piece that Schubert composed. It is much less well known 
                    than the A minor (Rosamunde) and D minor (Death 
                    and the Maiden) Quartets, probably because it lacks a 
                    catchy title, but also because it does make considerable demands 
                    upon the performers. Those demands are well met here, in this 
                    triumphant performance by the Kodály Quartet.
                  At the opposite extreme of Schubert’s career 
                    in chamber music lie the German Dances of 1813. He was but 
                    sixteen when he composed them, and they therefore reflect 
                    his reliance on the prevailing tradition of Viennese dance 
                    music. Nothing wrong with that, of course, and anyone who 
                    enjoys, say, the delights of Mozart’s dance music - and who 
                    would not? - will surely enjoy these engaging dances by the 
                    young Schubert; and they are beautifully played, too.
                  Terry 
                    Barfoot
                  see also Review 
                    by Michael Cookson