Search - Budapest String Quartet :: Great Performances From The Library Of Congress, Vol. 6: Budapest String Quartet In Concert At The Library of Congress
Qt No.16 in F, Op.135: III. Lento Assai, Cantante E Tranquillo
Qt No.16 in F, Op.135: IV. Der Schwer Gefasste Entschluss: Grave, Ma Non Troppo Tratto-Allegro
Qt No.15 in a, Op.132: I. Assai Sostenuto
Qt No.15 in a, Op.132: II. Allegro Ma Non Tanto
Qt No.15 in a, Op.132: III. Heiliger Dankgesang Eines Genesenden An Die Gottheit...
Qt No.15 in a, Op.132: IV. Alla Marcia, Assai Vivace
Qt No.15 in a, Op.132: V. Allegro Appassionato
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: I. Adagio Ma Non Troppo E Molto Espressivo
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: II. Allegro Molto Vivace
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: III. Allegro Moderato
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: IV. Andante Ma Non Troppo E Molto Cantabile-Piu Mosso-Andante Moderato..
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: V. Presto
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: VI. Adagio Quasi Un Poco Andante
Qt No.14 in c#, Op.131: VII. Allegro
Qt No.12 in E flat, Op.127: I. Maestoso-Allegro
Qt No.12 in E flat, Op.127: II. Adagio Ma Non E Troppo E Molto Cantabile-Andante Con Moto-Adagio...
Qt No.12 in E flat, Op.127: III. Scherzando Vivace-Presto
Qt No.12 in E flat, Op.127: IV. Finale
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: I. Adagio, Ma Non Troppo-Allegro
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: II. Presto-L'istesso Tempo
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: III. Andante Con Moto, Ma Non Troppo
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: IV. Alla Danza Tedesca. Allegro Assai
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: V. Cavatina. Adagio Molto Expressivo
Qt No.13 in B flat, Op.130: VI. Finale. Allegro
Grosse Fuge, Op. 133: Overtura. Allegro-Fuga
These recordings, which until now lay virtually hidden in the archives of the Library of Congress, span nearly the entire length of the Budapest's residency at the Library. This remarkable set showcases performances of yo... more »uthful ardor from the early 40s, as well as those deep and mature reflective performances which project the visceral excitement of the Budapest's onstage persona. The Budapest's exceptionally warm sound in these performances displays the quality of the famous Stradivarius instruments that the quartet played on at their Library concerts. The Budapest Beethoven cycles is being sold at a special price- three discs for the price of two. Bridge Records has taken great care in the restoration of these rarities- concerts that only a lucky few were privileged to hear at the original sold out performances, when the audiences regularly lined up around the block for tickets. Bridge has documented the set with extensive annotation by Harris Goldsmith.« less
These recordings, which until now lay virtually hidden in the archives of the Library of Congress, span nearly the entire length of the Budapest's residency at the Library. This remarkable set showcases performances of youthful ardor from the early 40s, as well as those deep and mature reflective performances which project the visceral excitement of the Budapest's onstage persona. The Budapest's exceptionally warm sound in these performances displays the quality of the famous Stradivarius instruments that the quartet played on at their Library concerts. The Budapest Beethoven cycles is being sold at a special price- three discs for the price of two. Bridge Records has taken great care in the restoration of these rarities- concerts that only a lucky few were privileged to hear at the original sold out performances, when the audiences regularly lined up around the block for tickets. Bridge has documented the set with extensive annotation by Harris Goldsmith.
CD Reviews
These are the Late Beethoven Quartets
Craig Matteson | Ann Arbor, MI | 07/08/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"...This is a live performance at the Library of Congress. But it is THE LATE BEETHOVEN STRING QUARTETS.This is GREAT STUFF. These quartets have a very special and devoted audience because of their exquisite beauty. Most who hear them love these pieces very deeply. I think this is a common effect. It is important to know that Beethoven explored things in these pieces that other musicians have been coming to grips with for well over a century and a half. These are not pieces about only charm and grace (although there is plenty of charm and grace in these pieces). These are pieces that go deep into the human soul.If you listen very closely these pieces can seem awfully strange. But if you listen even more closely their wonder shines through. Then awhile later you realize they own you and they become transcendent and they become a special part of your life.For extra fun, get the Dover edition of the score of the complete Beethoven String Quartets and follow along.The sound of these recordings is awfully good for their age, but don't expect it sounding like it came from the latest equipment. These pieces are so important that you will want to collect several versions of them. I also recommend the Guarneri Quartet recordings. There are several others."
Intense Beethoven -- Not for the faint of heart!
John Grabowski | USA | 03/01/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"If you think classical music--or at least string quartet literature--is mostly grace and refinement, get this set and be prepared to be blown away. These are searing-hot performances of Beethoven's last quartets, some say the greatest music he or even _anyone_ ever wrote (I wouldn't argue). The recordings are from live performances for the Library of Congress from 1941 to 1960. The sound is what you'd expect from that period, or maybe even a bit better, given how well these discs have been preserved. The audience is quiet (though very appreciative). But the expressivity of the playing is so intense that it cuts through any concerns for mere sonics. This is Beethoven with no middle-man. The Budapests are so naturalistic and musical that they disappear into the works...more recent performances by the Italiano, Emerson and Tokyo Quartets sound mannered and calculated by comparison. The Grosse Fugue and Op. 130 particularly stand out. There are some drawbacks to the hell-bent-for-leather approach. Sometimes they lose sight of the long line, but this is something you don't really hear until you've lived with these pieces for decades, and I mean decades. Sometimes they are too driven--rhythm at the expense of shape and shading. Sometimes there are ambiguities and subtlties that these musicians run over. But every approach to these works has some drawback--no one can milk all the music. The liner notes talk about how blown away they were with Toscanin's conducting approach--the clarity of textures and the impetuousness--and it shows in some of their interpretations--sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. There are times whem I don't agree with what they're doing (Op. 131), but find that *they* are so convinced of it that I just don't care!
Nice booklet with historic photos and an interesting essay on what brought this group of musicians to the Library of Congress. Of course, the listener should not stop with these recordings. The Budapests' own studio discs (on Sony), the Vegh, Yale, Busch, Fine Arts, Amadeus and Lindsay Quartet recordings are also mandatory listening: this music is too rich for any one performance to make sense of everything. But this set is highly recommended for any serious chamber music library."
Performances that will live forever
N. M. Swerdlow | Chicago, IL USA | 05/09/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The greatest quartets ever written by the greatest quartet that ever played. I have been listening to these works for fifty years, and heard the Budapest Quartet play them live when I was a lot younger. I have many recordings them, including the early fifties mono sets (Jac Gorodetzky second violin) and the early sixties stereo sets (Alexander Schneider second violin), of all the quartets on Columbia LP alas, neither transferred complete to CD although parts of each have been, and several recordings by other quartets, older, the Busch Quartet, also essential, and newer, of which there are many fine ones, the Quartetto Italiano and the Talich in particular. But nothing, nothing compares with these. They are as I remember them from so many years ago. There are no words to express how beautiful, how intense, these performances are: the first movement of op. 131, the Heiliger Dankgesang of op. 132 (Edgar Ortenberg second violin), the Cavatina of op. 130, and a Grosse Fuge, op. 133, with energy beyond all others. As one of the other reviewers recommends, get the Dover score, and then spend the rest of your life listening. How is the sound? Just fine except for occasional distortion in some louder passages, but that is no matter. These are without doubt among the greatest recordings ever made. Let us hope that more Library of Congress recordings are made available and that some day all the Columbia recordings are reissued, including the earlier 78's, some of which have made it to CD."
Precious performances trapped by bad engineering
A techno geek | Kihei, Maui, HI USA | 02/03/2009
(2 out of 5 stars)
"These transfers have been filtered to death. No one should let restoration engineers Adam Abeshouse and Silas Brown anywhere near an equalization knob. You can hear almost no surface noise on these 78 record transfers. But in the process of eliminating surface noise, the remaining tone of the Stradivarius instruments that the Budapest Quartet are playing is indistinguishable from $100 Chinese instruments. As Hemingway said, "It was a brilliant cure, but we lost the patient," or as the major said in the Vietnam war, "It became necessary to destroy the village in order to save it." The musical power of these performances is eviscerated by the dulled mushy sound. It is a shame that these are the only available releases of these precious recordings. Since they belong to the Library of Congress, hence the American people, they ought to be made open source.
Pearl, Sony, and Naxos are better labels for 78 archival recordings. I happened to get The Great Violinists on the Naxos label at the same time, and the 1927 recordings of Thibaud, Cortot, Casals --- when electric microphones had been in use only a year --- sound better than these transfers. Lest one think that it was the circumstance of live recording that is the problem here, just listen to what an amateur was able to capture on his 1940 live recording of Duke Ellington in an auditorium in Fargo, North Dakota (but not The Duke at Fargo, 1940: Special 60th Anniversary Edition which a reviewer warns has also been 'nonoised').
Fortunately, the 3rd disk in this set was recorded in 1960, so the engineers could resist the compulsion to filter surface noise, and the sound is very nice. The power of the Budapest Quartet comes through. Now, if only they would release on multichannel SACD the 1960s studio recordings of the Budapest Quartet --- and throw in the Linsday Quartet while you're at it --- then the ultimate Beethoven experiences would be available to the world."
"Just to think the fact these recordings were not available since 1951 and understand in its absolute transcendence the historical and artistic value of these supreme performances is by itself a huge motivation to acquire them. These recordings were made between 1940 and 1942 and the transcription could not be more successful.
Budapest String Quartets is the quintessential of the Chamber ensembles. They consolidated and guaranteed musicality, flair, passion, conveyance and mercurial commitment with Beethoven spirit.
It is no a mere casualty they have been inquired by Casals in his musical meetings in Prades as permanent guests.
All the performances are of first rate and possess that cosmic sense of contemplative gaze and perpetual melting with the eternity. The last stage of Beethoven, signed by a Farewell without sentimentalism and self indulgence is remarked and accented. For instance I do not think the supreme Quartet No.14 can be better played.
If you have decided to make an extraordinary collection of invaluable musical treasures, it's time for you to search and buy these diamantine recordings, that will mean not only a formidable approach to Beethoven but besides to be owner one of the most admirable treasures ever recorded.
Additionally the impressive format and its programmatic material is outstanding, with admirable statements and references.