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This evening's listening: more string quartets ...

Elliott Carter: String Quartet No. 1 ~ Arditti String Quartet

Béla Bartók: String Quartet No. 3 in C sharp major, and String Quartet No. 4 in C major ~ Takács Quartet

Regarding Carter's Quartet No. 1 by Blair Johnston on Allmusic.com...

Elliott Carter was already in his forties when he achieved renown with his First String Quartet. After its premiere in 1953, the work received a great deal of attention (primarily in Europe), and led to the assessment of its creator as one of the most gifted of the new American composers -- an assessment that has been supported by the four String Quartets which have followed in the ensuing four decades. The First String Quartet was Carter's first truly successful attempt at composing a large-scale piece employing the ideas of "metric modulation" he was then developing. (Metric modulation refers to the continual change of metric speeds, composed into the music at every level. In a piece employing metric modulation, the various melodic strands of the music rarely line up, for they are undergoing "modulation" at different rates--this leads to the impression that several different, independent musical layers are existing simultaneously.) At the time of its creation, the First String Quartet was a truly revolutionary work, and was considered nearly impossible to perform by existing quartets of the day.

While ostensibly in four movements, the motion of the First Quartet pauses only twice (in both cases in the middle of a movement, not in between movements). The first movement has been described by the composer as a kind of contrapuntal fantasy. There are four main linear ideas in the movement, supported by a number of secondary motives, all of with exist in different metrical worlds, at different speeds. These ideas are combined in various ways, rhythmically and harmonically, over the course of the movement, and eventually give way (without break of any kind) into the second movement, a rapid scherzo, marked allegro scorrevole (a favorite indication of the composer). After the trio section of the scherzo there is a pause in the activity. After continuing, the scherzo plunges almost immediately into a dramatic Adagio. Two separate musical ideas are developed in the Adagio. First there is a recitative-like thing involving the viola and cello. This is commented on by a duet between the two violins, now being played with mutes. As the movement progresses the two ideas are heard simultaneously. The final movement is a set of variations, though not of the kind one would expect of, say, Beethoven. The movement is built on a number of ideas which increase in speed upon each repetition. Some of the music becomes so fast that the players are forced to present the ideas in the form of rapid tremolo, while other ideas evaporate as the movement progresses, allowing new music to force its way into the texture.

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I tried listening to this disc today in honor of Vinyl Day, but I had to turn it off after a few minutes due to its unbearable shrillness! (I bought it at an LP sale for $1 last week...got my money's worth.)

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I then turned to my other purchase from that day...better but still a little harsh. Maybe the SACD sounds better. Quite an intense performance.

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In observation of Good Friday and Easter Sunday ...

Arvo Pärt: Passio (St. John Passion) ~ Antony Pitts / Tonus Peregrinus

George Frederic Handel: Messiah, (Parts 2 & 3) ~ Christopher Hogwood with Simon Preston

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In observation of Good Friday and Easter Sunday ...

Arvo Pärt: Passio (St. John Passion) ~ Antony Pitts / Tonus Peregrinus

George Frederic Handel: Messiah, (Parts 2 & 3) ~ Christopher Hogwood with Simon Preston

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I have that Messiah and it is wonderful. I also have Ohrwall/Swedish Radio Symphony which is an FIM Remaster and a newer Stephen Layton Britten Symphonia which is nice. I tend to listen to the Hogwood and Ohrwall the most.
 
Arvo Part music - good stuff, good for the soul.

* I'm listening to Classical music right now; on the r.a.d.i.o. - chamber with hautbois and clarinette. ...Violin, ...various.

I like Pärt in general, though the Passio is a minimalist's minimalism; basically it's a hour of recitative in Latin.
 
I have that Messiah {Hogwood/AAM} and it is wonderful. I also have Ohrwall/Swedish Radio Symphony which is an FIM Remaster and a newer Stephen Layton Britten Symphonia which is nice. I tend to listen to the Hogwood and Ohrwall the most.

I also have versions by Charles Mackerras/English Chamber and John Eliot Gardner/English Baroque Soloists. I can't really say that I strongly prefer one over the others. In general I prefer versions with smaller ensembles.
 
* How did you put those two dots in top of the "a" from Part?

Bob, my text processor program has the facility to type "special characters" such as é, â, ø. I copy and paste them from there into AS' text processor. 'Word' and other word processors also usually have the facility to type special characters.



To night's listening, Bruckner whose music has beautiful elements though it is long and can seem ponderous and repetitive if you're not in the mood.

Anton Bruckner: Symphony No. 7 in E major, WAB 107 ~ Daniel Barenboim / Berlin Philharmonic

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Bob, my text processor program has the facility to type "special characters" such as é, â, ø. I copy and paste them from there into AS' text processor. 'Word' and other word processors also usually have the facility to type special characters.

My keyboard has a key with those two dots that goes on top of certain vowels of certain words, in blue color instead of white, but I just don't know how to use it. ...Some day I will learn how to type in French with the right accents (e accent aigu, e accent grave, c cedille, o accent circonflexe, a trema, etc.).
...And I was top of my class in French!
 
To night's listening, Bruckner whose music has beautiful elements though it is long and can seem ponderous and repetitive if you're not in the mood.

Anton Bruckner: Symphony No. 7 in E major, WAB 107 ~ Daniel Barenboim / Berlin Philharmonic

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I have the Bruckner 9 Symphonies by Daniel Barenboim...it was 2nd hand on Amazon. I have Simon Rattles 9th and Friedmann Layer's 9th as well. How do you rate Barenboim's performances as I really only have these. Just curious to learn. Thanks.
 
I have the Bruckner 9 Symphonies by Daniel Barenboim...it was 2nd hand on Amazon. I have Simon Rattles 9th and Friedmann Layer's 9th as well. How do you rate Barenboim's performances as I really only have these. Just curious to learn. Thanks.

I don't have a large Bruckner collection either, though I do have a complete set of the Bruckner symphonies on Naxos conducted by Georg Tintner and several orchestras on Naxos.

I'm not a musically trained person so I usually reserve my opinion regarding performance, (unless performance is exceptionally bad). Regarding Barenboim's version of the 7th on Teldec, I'll only say that the performance seemed good at least; the sound quality was average or a little above.
 
Thanks, Feanor. Good to know. I have read good things about the Barenboim vs other Bruckners. I like them, but would not place Bruckner near the top of my classical list, so have not explored other conductors.
 
My keyboard has a key with those two dots that goes on top of certain vowels of certain words, in blue color instead of white, but I just don't know how to use it. ...Some day I will learn how to type in French with the right accents (e accent aigu, e accent grave, c cedille, o accent circonflexe, a trema, etc.).
...And I was top of my class in French!

Bob, in Windows versions there is a small app called "character map" usually in "accessories" that will show you the various characters available for a given font. You can copy/paste your accented characters from there.
 
Bob, in Windows versions there is a small app called "character map" usually in "accessories" that will show you the various characters available for a given font. You can copy/paste your accented characters from there.

Thank you very much Bob; you just showed me the 'true' way. :cool: ... Microsoft Corporation

* Test: Arvo Pärt ...It works it works! :exciting:

Again: Arvo Pärt

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Thank you very much Bob; you just showed me the 'true' way. :cool: ... Microsoft Corporation

* Test: Arvo Pärt ...It works it works! :exciting:

Again: Arvo Pärt

Yes, and it will work every time too.:D


To night I listened to two excellent violin concertos by British composers; (I particularly like the Britten). In this case with excellent performance, (as far as I'm a judge), by Maxim Vengerov and Mstislav Rostropovich on EMI classics. The sound quality is above average too; I recommend this album w/o reservation.

Benjamin Britten: Violin Concerto in D minor, Op. 15

William Walton: Violin Concerto


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