Prazak Quartet – Arnold Schönberg: String Quartet No. 3, Scherzo, Presto, Chamber Symphony (2010/2022)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:04:26 minutes | 1,17 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © Praga Digitals
The fifth volume devoted to Schönberg’s chamber music. On display here is writing that, after being based on traditional models (youthful Scherzo and Presto), evolves towards a melodic density and clarity of counterpoint making the Chamber Symphony, Op.9 (1906) accomplished and radiant as much in its chamber transcriptions as in the versions for full orchestra. The Quartet No.3 (1926) achieves a masterful balance between rhythm and harmony, melody and counterpoint, horizontality and verticality. All these processes blend in an original art of the continuous variation. By blurring the formal aspect, the PRAŽÁKs make him the heir of other Viennese: Haydn, Mozart, Schubert, Brahms… and Beethoven.”Schoenberg’s Third Quartet was among the first works he composed using exclusively dodecaphonic techniques. The shimmering cool and textural hypersensitivity of the LaSalle Quartet (originally Deutsche Grammophon, now available in a Brilliant Classics set) encapsulates the work’s disembodied suspension of reality, whereas the Pražák musicians play up the associations with Brahms’s op.51 quartets, emphasising the composer’s use of rhythm as a principal binding agent. In so doing they discover a warmth and communicability that in this particular work one might have scarcely thought possible.
The Chamber Symphony’s exhilarating amalgam of searing propulsion, bracing tonal interplay and structural concision belongs to the same sonata-hybrid tradition as Beethoven’s ‘Serioso’ String Quartet in F minor op.95. Using Webern’s arrangement for standard piano quintet, the Pražák Quartet (with Jaromír Klepác?) plays with such imperative communicability and fiery virtuosity that one senses the symphony’s profound compression more than ever. This is music that lives on the edge and the Pražák players ride the musical precipice every inch of the way. The early Brahms–cum–Dvor?ák Scherzo and Presto are miniature charmers that on the evidence of these sparklingly affectionate readings should be far better known. A revelatory set of performances, presented in exemplary sound of illuminating detail.” (thestrad.com)
Tracklist:
1-01. Prazak Quartet – Scherzo, for String Quartet in F Major (07:28)
1-02. Prazak Quartet – Presto, for String Quartet in C Major (06:50)
1-03. Prazak Quartet – Chamber Symphony, Op. 9 (Transcription for Piano and String Quartet by Anton Webern): I. Sonata-allegro – II. Scherzo – III. Durchfuhrung – IV. Adagio – V. Recapitulation – Finale (20:28)
1-04. Prazak Quartet – I. Moderato (08:32)
1-05. Prazak Quartet – II. Adagio (08:04)
1-06. Prazak Quartet – III. Intermezzo. Allegro moderato (06:51)
1-07. Prazak Quartet – IV. Rondo. Molto moderato (06:11)
Download:
mqs.link_PrazakQuartetArn0ldSchnbergStringQuartetN0.3Scherz0Prest0ChamberSymph0ny201020222496