Search - Igor Stravinsky, Alfred Schittke, Nikolai Andreyevich Roslavets :: Stravinsky, Schittke, Roslavets, Smirnov, Firsova - Chilingirian String Quartet

Stravinsky, Schittke, Roslavets, Smirnov, Firsova - Chilingirian String Quartet
Igor Stravinsky, Alfred Schittke, Nikolai Andreyevich Roslavets
Stravinsky, Schittke, Roslavets, Smirnov, Firsova - Chilingirian String Quartet
Genre: Classical
 
This is an exciting record. It's customary for string quartets playing Stravinsky's neoclassical Three Pieces keep the music at an arms length. So it's refreshing to find a savage, take-no-prisoners performance of them h...  more »

     

CD Details


Synopsis

Amazon.com
This is an exciting record. It's customary for string quartets playing Stravinsky's neoclassical Three Pieces keep the music at an arms length. So it's refreshing to find a savage, take-no-prisoners performance of them here. The Chilingerian brings a wonderful sense of dramatic tension to its approach. Their rendering of Stravinsky's Concertino has great rhythmic vitality and a jazzy, tongue-in-cheek flavor. Schnittke's Canon--in Memory of Stravinsky, an unbearably sad piece, gets a moving performance here, as does Firsova's dark and ethereal quartet. Smirnov's Quartet No. 2 gets a spicy, almost dangerous reading. This excellent group's timing is extraordinary; the players breathe together--a lost art in the digital age. New and modern music cries out for more ensembles like this one. --Gwendolyn Freed
 

CD Reviews

An interesting and intelligently conceived program that prom
Discophage | France | 02/16/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This is an interesting and intelligently conceived program of 20th century Russian compositions for string quartet, but it promises slightly more than it delivers.



It is centered around Stravinsky (who gets the very large bold type on the CD's cover) and his complete output in the genre, comprised of his witty and original 3 pieces for string quartet from 1914, his jocular and impertinent 1920 Concertino for String Quartet and the much later and terse Double Canon In Memoriam Raoul Dufy (1959). The Chilingirian Quartet's reading is perhaps a tad to civilized and elegant in the two early pieces.



With Alexander Mosolov, Nicolai Roslavets is an important but almost forgotten figure of early Soviet modernism. His short (12') 3rd quartet from 1920 is couched in the international modernist idiom of the times, aggressive and stretching tonality but not dislocating it, close to Berg's Quartet op. 3, Hindemith and Bloch. Despite its relative lack of a distinctive personality, it is interesting nonetheless for its documentation of a modernist trend within the early Soviet Union, which was stifled and sent to near-oblivion under Stalinist rule.



No wonder Dmitri Smirnov's 2nd quartet and Elena Firsova's 4th share much in common, as they happen to by husband and wife. Among these shared features are a passionate angularity reminiscent of Berg and Schoenberg's quartets, and a fascination with high-pitched violin melismas.



Smirnov's 2nd quartet was composed in 1985 and is dedicated to the composer's younger son. In the first movement's first section, the language is close to that of Berg's Suite Lyrique, but more thorny and without Berg's sensuousness. After 3 minutes of this knotty music, a slower and more original section sets in, based on a lullaby (actually Mozart's "Schlaf, mein Prinzchen", "Sleep, My Little Prince", K. 550), with high-pitched melismas from the 1st violin reminiscent of Gypsy music, but that could be evocations of a child's chirrupy babbling.



The second movement is also a lullaby, sometimes vaguely reminiscent in its serene sentimentality of some adagio arias or duets from Strauss' "Viennese" operas. Its bareness is also vaguely evocative of some slow movement in Britten's string quartets - but unlike Britten, I am not convinced that Smirnov transcends the almost kitschy simplicity of his base material, except in the final pages, with the enigmatic return of the same high-pitched melismas.



I first encountered the music of Elena Firsova through the recording of her 3rd quartet "Misterioso" by the Lydian Quartet on an early MCA CD, and was greatly impressed with it (see my review). Her 15-minute long 4th quartet "Amoroso", written in 1989 and dedicated to the same Lydian Quartet, is passionate in its first ten minutes but in a thorny and angular fashion reminiscent of Schoenberg's later quartets even more than Berg's, but a mood of mysterious serenity sets in after 10 minutes with a high-pitched duet of the two violins playing harmonics.



Schnittke's Canon In Memoriam Igor Stravinsky is the best piece on this disc. With its simple gestures of searing intensity, it could have been written by the recently deceased, arch-maverick of Soviet music: Galina Ustvolskaya.



All in all, there are probably better introductions to contemporary Soviet/Russian string quartets (those of Schnittke and Gubaidulina are masterpieces), and I find the MCA disc with Firsova's 3rd quartet a better introduction to this particular composer, though its couplings aren't as coherent as here and its timing too short (but the price at which it sells as I write this review makes it more than a steal - a gift). But this disc is still a welcome addition for anyone seriously interested in contemporary Russian/Soviet music. This program has been reissued by Catalyst, and you might want to check it out for a more favorable price.

"
Worth getting for the other composers featured here!
Discophage | 10/01/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The Stravinsky and Schnittke are fine pieces, blah blah blah but the real reason to buy this is for the superb Roslavets quartet and his Russian successors Smirnov and his wife Firsova. Firsova's piece especially is sensual and moving. Nice performances by the Chilinigirian quartet!"