Comparison recordings of these quartets: 
                
                Guarneri Quartet [late 1960s ADD] RCA/BMG 
                82876-55704-2 
                Vegh Quartet [1952 monophonic AAD] Music 
                & Arts CD-1084 
                Hollywood String Quartet [1958 monophonic 
                ADD] Testament SBT 3082 
                Opus 132, Alban Berg Quartet EMI 7243 
                5 69793 2 1 
              
These last quartets 
                of Beethoven are among his very greatest 
                and most influential works, written 
                when he was stone deaf. His recovery 
                from a bout of serious illness in May 
                of 1825 gave rise to the deeply-felt 
                slow movement of the Fifteenth Quartet, 
                which Beethoven called "Holy song 
                of thanks (‘Heiliger dankgesang’) to 
                the divinity, from one made well." 
                But his liver cirrhosis soon again became 
                acute. The Sixteenth Quartet was the 
                last complete work he wrote, although 
                after that in December 1826 he wrote 
                a new final movement to the thirteenth 
                quartet to replace the Grosse Fuge. 
                He lay on a filthy mattress saturated 
                with vomit, diarrhoea, and the copious 
                exudate from his suppurating liver, 
                and out of this hell of stink came this 
                charming, delightful music - Op. 135. 
                People who loved him came to help him, 
                pilgrims came to touch the expiring 
                saint of music. He died on 24 March 
                1826. 
              
 
              
The late quartets were 
                rarely performed during his life and 
                even for some time thereafter. It wasn’t 
                until Schoenberg’s exploration of atonality 
                that the full harmonic implications 
                of these magnificent works were significantly 
                demonstrated. 
              
 
              
When I first saw this 
                recording I assumed it was one of the 
                Chandos Historical series from the Soviet 
                Union, but, no, these are brand new 
                recordings by the venerable and still 
                active Borodin quartet. Only the cellist, 
                Valentin Berlinsky has been with the 
                group since the earliest days in the 
                1950s, and violinist Abramenkov is the 
                only other hold-over from the group’s 
                magnificent Haydn Seven Last Words 
                or their fine 1980s second recorded 
                traversal of the Shostakovich Quartets. 
                Aharonian and Naidin are new to my experience. 
                The good news is that the Borodin Quartet, 
                with half new personnel, at the very 
                least is still everything it ever was. 
                This is the first complete Beethoven 
                cycle this group has ever recorded, 
                although they played Beethoven quartets 
                before, albeit rarely. 
              
 
              
The Hollywood String 
                Quartet make these quartets sound so 
                beautiful, perhaps more beautiful than 
                they should sound. The (first) Vegh 
                performance on the other hand is possessed 
                of a raw, gripping, wiry energy. The 
                Guarneri play with wide dynamics, romance 
                and passion. The Alban Berg quartet 
                achieve in No. 15 an awesome intellectual 
                monumentality. 
              
 
              
These Borodin Quartet 
                performances are more relaxed and very 
                dramatic. Tragic sections become sadly 
                wistful. Lyric sections are very lyric. 
                Ironic sections become playful; the 
                vivace in Op. 135 has never sounded 
                so fleetingly light. Vigorous sections 
                become rollickingly joyful. As in their 
                Shostakovich cycle, if a passage can 
                be interpreted as having a dance rhythm, 
                it is boldly so interpreted, and as 
                a result these performances are more 
                energetic, extroverted and optimistic 
                than any I’ve ever heard. Throughout 
                there is a sense of close ensemble, 
                an intense desire to find and communicate 
                humour and joy which can in other hands 
                sound excessively — even monotonously 
                — gloomy. Perhaps this would not be 
                so remarkable in, for instance, the 
                Op. 18 quartets, which I have not heard 
                these artists perform. Recorded sound 
                is excellent, clear, close and realistic. 
                Again, these are not Soviet recordings. 
              
 
              
The Beethoven quartets 
                are so varied in mood and structure 
                that hearing a fine performance of these 
                two says little if anything about how 
                the other quartets would be played. 
                I hope very much to hear this whole 
                set soon, but, in the meantime, buy 
                the other volumes in this series at 
                your own risk. 
              
 
              
Paul Shoemaker