Chiaroscuro Quartet: Mozart, Schubert Chiaroscuro Quartet
Album info
Album-Release:
2011
HRA-Release:
28.04.2014
Label: Aparté
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Chiaroscuro Quartet
Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791), Franz Peter Schubert (1797-1828)
Album including Album cover
- 1 I. Allegro 13:31
- 2 II. Andante cantabile 06:51
- 3 III. Menuetto - Allegro 04:19
- 4 IV. Allegro molto 10:21
- 5 I. Allegro ma non troppo 12:32
- 6 II. Andante 06:44
- 7 III. Menuetto - Allegretto - Trio 06:43
- 8 IV. Allegro moderato 07:37
Info for Chiaroscuro Quartet: Mozart, Schubert
This recording brings together two quartets composed almost forty years apart. Mozart's 'Dissonant' was the last of his set of six quartets dedicated to Joseph Haydn and marked the apogee of Classicism. Schubert's 'Rosamunde' was his first mature string quartet, written at the dawn of Romanticism and in the shadow of Beethoven. The juxtaposition offers a lesson in both contrasts and connections. Played here by the period instrument Chiaroscuro Quartet, the power and beauty of these works are explored with virtuosity, wit and verve.
The Chiaroscuro Quartet is led by Alina Ibragimova – every inch a soloist – and there’s no doubting that it’s the excitement of her music-making that stamps its personality on these performances. Not that her fellow musicians sit back, but her dazzling playing in the outer movements of Mozart’s Dissonance Quartet makes them sound almost like violin concertos.
Certainly, it’s not often that you hear period-instrument playing of such consummate and seemingly effortless virtuosity. The two movements are done with both repeats observed, so that in each case the coda, following the second-half repeat, makes its full effect as the music’s culmination. It would be hard, too, to imagine the work’s slow introduction done with a greater sense of mystery.
The Chiaroscuro’s account of Schubert’s A minor Quartet – one of the most hauntingly melancholy of all his pieces – has much to offer, though there are times when its melodic warmth sounds rather underplayed. A good deal of this music unfolds at the pianissimo level, and it’s good to hear due note taken of Schubert’s markings, particularly in such moments as the slow movement’s ‘Rosamunde’ theme. If anything, the fortissimo of the finale’s central episode could do with more weight and tension. But this is an impressive debut recording, and the light and shade of the playing fully justifies the name the group has chosen for itself. (BBC Music Magazine)
Chiaroscuro Quartet
Chiaroscuro Quartet
Formed in 2005, the Chiaroscuro Quartet performs music of the Classical period with historical instruments and approach.
Recently the quartet played their first concert at the Edinburgh International Festival followed by their debut in Germany as part of the Festival Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Highlights in the past took the young ensemble to London's Wigmore Hall, York Early Music Centre, The Sage Gateshead (recorded for BBC Radio 3), Auditorium du Louvre Paris, Théâtre du Jeu-de-Paume in Aix-en-Provence, Grand Théâtre de Dijon, Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon and a residency in Aldeburgh.
Following the critically acclaimed release of their first album in September 2011, the Chiaroscuro Quartet released its second recording for the French label Aparté in April 2013. The CD including Beethoven's Quartetto serioso, Mozart's Quartet K. 428 and Adagio and Fugue K. 546 received four out of four possible f in the French magazine Télérama and was given the best note for its interpretation in Germany's major magazine for chamber music Ensemble.
In the coming months the quartet will return to the BBC Radio 3 for a lunchtime concert in London and appear on stage of the Nikolaisaal Potsdam and Kunstverein Wiesloch. Concerts in the Netherlands (Concertgebouw Amsterdam), Belgium (Ghent, Handelsbeurs Concertzaal), France (Clermont-Ferrand and Pau) and Spain (Madrid and Bilbao) are scheduled for early 2014.
Since 2009 the Quartet has held a residency at Port-Royal-des-Champs dedicated to Mozart's quartets.
This album contains no booklet.