This disc of Schoenberg 
                  from the Naxos Robert Craft Schoenberg Collection provides an 
                  interesting cross-section of works from forty years of the composer’s 
                  life. It covers three genres: string quartet, string orchestra 
                  and choral music. 
                The Six A Cappella 
                  Mixed Choruses that start the disc were begun in 1928 with 
                  the harmonisation of three folksongs at the request of the ‘State 
                  Commission for the Folksong-Book for Youth’ in Berlin. The remaining 
                  three folk arrangements were completed in an analogous style 
                  some twenty years later, Schoenberg then resident in Los Angeles. 
                  The studio surroundings of Abbey Road, lend an unexpected intimacy, 
                  as well as a somewhat exposed quality, to the sound of the Simon 
                  Joly Singers, who rise to the challenge, presenting a fittingly 
                  measured and able performance. The varying nature and mood of 
                  each text is effectively portrayed and conveyed.
                The String Quartet 
                  No. 2 provides some of the most profound music on this disc, 
                  although – as Robert Craft in his useful booklet notes writes 
                  – it does ‘not make public statements’. It is surrounded with 
                  a concealed and personal tone throughout. Begun in 1907, and 
                  completed – at a particularly turbulent period in Schoenberg’s 
                  life – in September 1908 before its first performance in December 
                  of the same year, two of the quartet’s four movements see the 
                  addition of a soprano, who sings texts by the German poet Stefan 
                  George. Within the quartet Schoenberg makes considerable advances 
                  in technique and harmonic language, demonstrating skill in a 
                  notoriously difficult medium. The intimate quality found in 
                  the Mixed Choruses is continued in the quartet; both 
                  the performance itself by the Fred Sherry String Quartet and 
                  the recorded sound - now in a different venue - contributing 
                  to this commendable aspect of the disc. Jennifer Welch-Babidge 
                  gives a potent and intelligent performance in the final two 
                  movements of the work, and is appropriately responsive to the 
                  German texts.
                The closing Suite 
                  in G for String Orchestra was composed in 1934 and was the 
                  first complete work from Schoenberg’s time in America. It was 
                  written with orchestras containing promising young players in 
                  mind, although the rather advanced technique required is sufficiently 
                  challenging for the work to be only seldom performed. The piece 
                  is labelled as in ‘the old style’, referring to the dance forms 
                  of the eighteenth-century, reflected in the five movements: 
                  Overture, Adagio, Minuet, Gavotte 
                  and Gigue. A lighter outlook here provides a natural 
                  balance to the darkness of the quartet. A full, warm and demonstrative 
                  string tone of considerable depth is supplied by New York’s 
                  Twentieth Century Classics Ensemble, rounding off a considerable 
                  contribution to the Schoenberg discography.
                
              Adam Binks
              see also Review 
                by Michael Cookson
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