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Leos Janácek: Kreutzer Sonata; Intimate Letters; Pavel Haas: From the Monkey Mountains
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Leos Janácek: Kreutzer Sonata; Intimate Letters; Pavel Haas: From the Monkey Mountains
Current price: $23.99
Barnes and Noble
Leos Janácek: Kreutzer Sonata; Intimate Letters; Pavel Haas: From the Monkey Mountains
Current price: $23.99
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The two string quartets of
Leos Janacek
are major works of the 20th century chamber repertory, with many strong recordings available. This one, however, stands out. The
Escher String Quartet
devises a unique program of three works that lie on the edge between program music and realms of individual psychology, and the music gains a cumulative effect as it proceeds. The album would be worth the listener's time and money just for the
String Quartet No. 2, Op. 7
, of
Pavel Haas
, who was killed by the Nazis in 1944. Subtitled
"From the Monkey Mountains"
(a name for the Moravian Highlands in Brno lingo), the work has programmatic titles, but
Haas
insisted that it was not to be taken as representational; rather, the movements were about the states of mind the region inspired. The main attraction is the finale, "A Wild Night," which adds percussionist
Collin Currie
. It is a riotous piece that incorporates rollicking syncopations. As the annotations point out,
Janacek
's
String Quartet No. 1 ("The Kreutzer Sonata")
is unique in the musical literature in being a composition based on a literary work (a novella by
Tolstoy
) that was itself based on another piece of music, the
Violin Sonata No. 9 in A minor, Op. 47 ("Kreutzer")
of
Beethoven
. Both the
sonatas have lurking erotic content.
's tale is a right-wing Christian work whose religious position is undermined by the author's sheer literary talent, while the
String Quartet No. 2 ("Intimate Letters")
was an extended love letter to the composer's young mistress. The entire program is absorbing, and the
brings the proper intensity without losing accuracy. Ideally, intimate sound from Potton Hall in Suffolk complements all the ideas here in one of the strongest chamber recordings of 2023. ~ James Manheim
Leos Janacek
are major works of the 20th century chamber repertory, with many strong recordings available. This one, however, stands out. The
Escher String Quartet
devises a unique program of three works that lie on the edge between program music and realms of individual psychology, and the music gains a cumulative effect as it proceeds. The album would be worth the listener's time and money just for the
String Quartet No. 2, Op. 7
, of
Pavel Haas
, who was killed by the Nazis in 1944. Subtitled
"From the Monkey Mountains"
(a name for the Moravian Highlands in Brno lingo), the work has programmatic titles, but
Haas
insisted that it was not to be taken as representational; rather, the movements were about the states of mind the region inspired. The main attraction is the finale, "A Wild Night," which adds percussionist
Collin Currie
. It is a riotous piece that incorporates rollicking syncopations. As the annotations point out,
Janacek
's
String Quartet No. 1 ("The Kreutzer Sonata")
is unique in the musical literature in being a composition based on a literary work (a novella by
Tolstoy
) that was itself based on another piece of music, the
Violin Sonata No. 9 in A minor, Op. 47 ("Kreutzer")
of
Beethoven
. Both the
sonatas have lurking erotic content.
's tale is a right-wing Christian work whose religious position is undermined by the author's sheer literary talent, while the
String Quartet No. 2 ("Intimate Letters")
was an extended love letter to the composer's young mistress. The entire program is absorbing, and the
brings the proper intensity without losing accuracy. Ideally, intimate sound from Potton Hall in Suffolk complements all the ideas here in one of the strongest chamber recordings of 2023. ~ James Manheim