All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Debussy, Ravel & Dutilleux: String Quartets
When one considers the string quartet, one tends to think of the great Germanic composers of this genre, with French counterparts often being forgotten. This collection, however, brings together a series of French string quartets which are extraordinary in their own right. Debussy’s String Quartet in G minor Op.10 of 1893 is demonstrative of the composer’s exposure to Javanese music at the Exposition Universelle of three years earlier, and also shows the Russian influence of Borodin, which can be heard in the slow movement. When Ravel composed his own String Quartet in 1902–3, which he dedicated to Gabriel Fauré, similarities were found between this and Debussy’s: these include the four-movement structure of both and the second movement Scherzos’ definite hints of exoticism. However, thanks to his beautiful melodies for both the cello and the violin, Ravel managed to create a turning point in his career with this innovative composition. Dutilleux’s quartet is written in an entirely different style, based neither on harmony nor counterpoint, as with Debussy and Ravel respectively, but through the notion of a pivot note, with each movement built up around a single tone. Ainsi la nuit offers a certain eclecticism, with the composer contrasting the influences of Gregorian chant, the night sky and the sounds of nature to create a visionary piece. The critically acclaimed Juillard Quartet, established in 1946 by founders Robert Mann and William Schuman, is one of the most recorded string quartets of all time. The ensemble has led an active life of international tours and has performed in some of the world’s most prestigious concert halls. New booklet note by French music expert Robert Orledge. “Technically, the playing is impeccable, with perfectly matched tone and texture in all three works.” Gramophone Magazine | 
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| |  | Ravel & Debussy: String Quartets
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| |  | Ravel & Debussy: String Quartets
This new recording devoted to quartets by Debussy and Ravel, bearing the Slavic accent of Prague's Talich Quartet, is truly marvellous. The album represents a new phase in the quartet’s career that will highlight the sheer versatility of this talented group, so proud of its illustrious roots. NEW RECORDING 2012 “Fresh light brought to a familiar coupling of French quartets … the Talich Quartet somehow manage to cover all bases, playing with an exquisite sensitivity to phrase and instrumental balance … two highly accomplished performances” The Strad, November /December 2012 ****/***** “supreme performances...the interpretations are so organically and seamlessly imagined…The subtlety, beauty and sinew of the playing are simply amazing” Gramophone Magazine, November 2012 “The second movement scatters pizzicato notes across the stave in a virtuosic display, but it’s the aggression of the quartet’s leader, Jan Talich Jnr, in the bowed recitative phrases which impress.” International Record Review, November 2012 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | 20th-Century String Quartets: Debussy, Ravel, Toldra & Zemlinsky
This double album brings together two recordings from 2004 and 2006 in which the Cuarteto Casals opportunely demonstrated its virtuosity and the links between figures as different as Turina, Ravel, Debussy and Zemlinsky. “Well loved quartets superbly performed, and imaginatively coupled” BBC Music Magazine, October 2012 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ravel & Debussy: String Quartets
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| |  | Ravel, Debussy & Dutilleux: String Quartets
Antje Weithaas, Daniel Sepec, Tabea Zimmermann and Jean-Guihen Queyras founded the Arcanto Quartet in 2002. The four musicians, who in addition to their musical affinities share a close personal friendship, quickly conquered the world of chamber music and have played all the major European venues. The 2009/10 season started with a tour of Japan in September, followed by a residency at the Wigmore Hall, where the quartet invited Jörg Widmann, Silke Avenhaus and Olivier Marron for several concerts. This autumn, the Arcantos will visit North America. For their third CD for harmonia mundi they perform three French String Quartets, all by composers who wrote little chamber music. Debussy and Ravel composed their only string quartet at the start of their careers, whereas Dutilleux wrote Ainsi la nuit shortly before his 60th birthday. Debussy’s quartet, dedicated to the Ysaÿe Quartet, is his only work to possess an opus number. Written in 1892-3, it comprises the standard four movements and adopts sonata form in the two outer movements. The String Quartet of Ravel was composed in 1902-03 and premiered by the Heyman Quartet on 5 March 1904. It possesses undeniable signs of kinship with the Debussy work: it conforms to the cyclic principle, and begins and ends with a sonata form movement; its scherzo is similarly characterised by crackling pizzicatos which stylise the sound of the guitar and give the movement a Spanish colour; as with Debussy, the strings play with mutes in the first and last sections of the slow movement. The works of Dutilleux are rare and matured at length. Commissioned by the Serge Koussevitzky Foundation, Ainsi la nuit occupied the composer from 1971 to 1976. Dedicated ‘to the memory of Ernest Sussman [an American art-lover and friend of the composer] and in homage to Olga Koussevitzky’, it was premièred by the Parrenin Quartet at the Théâtre de l’Est Parisien on 6 January 1977. “Right at the start, the performance of the Debussy quartet is a striking example of the Arcanto’s skill and stylistic perception. The playing has muscle, incisiveness and drive, tempered by delicacy of nuance...It is a riveting disc – a further manifestation of the Arcanto’s blend of finesse, flair and probing intelligence.” The Telegraph, 20th August 2010 ***** “With their velvet tone the starry Arcanto Quartet prove ideal performers. Often the heartbeat is in the cello (Jean-Guihen Queyras, exceptionally eloquent); but whoever throbs, the music soars...A lovely disc.” The Times, 28th August 2010 **** “A "super-group" among quartets, with each player an established soloist, the Arcanto Quartet's intonation is faultless, its blend fresh and exciting.” The Independent on Sunday, 5th September 2010 “The interpretation of the Debussy Quartet has sinew and propulsion, with that apt shading of dynamics and subtlety of nuance that have become hallmarks of the Arcanto's distinctive and distinguished style. Delicacy and fluency are equally embraced in this commanding performance, as they are in the Ravel” Gramophone Magazine, November 2010 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ravel & Debussy - String Quartets
with Simon Crawford-Phillips (piano) Dante Quartet The Dante Quartet continue their award-winning exploration of the French string quartet with this disc which includes two of the greatest works of this genre. Both quartets dazzled and disturbed at their first performances. Debussy’s fantastic, spiralling variations, resisting orthodox ‘development’ of ideas, is described as reminiscent of Monet’s in recording the variations of light on the façade of Rouen Cathedral. Traditionalist commentators were shocked, but the exotic beauty of the writing excited many, including the young Ravel. Ravel’s Quartet is to some extent an hommage to Debussy, but, typically, also a work of startling originality. Also included is Ravel’s Violin Sonata No 2 in G major, an intriguing, jazz-influenced work, energetic but with a dark undertow of pain; written, as Ravel said, with the aim of ‘exploring the basic incompatibility of violin and piano’. “The Dantes are one of the finest newish quartets based in Britain... alive to every nuance of these ever-fascinating works.” Sunday Times, 10th January 2010 **** “They find all manner of shading and delicacy in the Debussy; their Ravel is a miracle of feather-light tone and seamless phrasing.” Financial Times, 8th January 2010 ***** “The shifts of light and shade in Debussy’s String Quartet are ear-catchingly etched in by the Dante Quartet...The distinctions of style are well made.” The Telegraph, 26th January 2010 **** “The splendid Dante Quartet capture beautifully both the shifting light on Debussy's impressionist canvas and the luminous filigree of Ravel's transcendent creation.” The Observer, 31st January 2010 “…it is surprising that Debussy composed his string quartet with no poetic or visual allusion. The Dante Quartet give a full-blooded performance… At the opening of the scherzo, it momentarily seems that they… are playing as if they have hammers, but this is immediately tempered with an exquisite reining-back. Similarly, the transition to the central section of the scherzo in Ravel's Quartet fades to a whisper, as preparation for the sublime dream-world ahead.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2010 **** “...the way melodies seem to emerge subtly from the texture before retreating back into it [in the Debussy] is most appealing...The Ravel Quartet, too, is unfailingly musical.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2010 “The Dante Quartet...has an impeccable sense of style and these are in every way beautifully played and recorded performances.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Debussy & Ravel - String Quartets
Australian String Quartet The current membership of the Australian String Quartet was established in 2006. Among their many accolades, these players were selected to perform a series of concerts to celebrate the Danish Royal Wedding in 2004. This is a wonderful CD filled with dazzling musicianship and virtuoso performances. The quartet is currently touring the UK giving concerts in London and Birmingham. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ravel, Debussy, Fauré - String Quartets
When the Quatuor Ebène was signed to Virgin Classics in early 2008. Alain Lanceron, the label’s President, said: “The Quatuor Ebène is the embodiment of the modern string quartet. The extraordinary way its members craft their sonority, their re-examination of quartet masterpieces, their readiness to engage with music beyond the traditional repertoire, their innovative and creative approach: all these factors have led us to invite them to add their lustre to Virgin Classics' roster of artists. We welcome them with enthusiasm – the same kind of enthusiasm they bring to everything they do." Formed in France in 1999, the Quatuor Ebène took its name from ebony, the precious and exotic wood used in instrument-making. The award-winning ensemble has since achieved an enviable international reputation for refined, dynamic musicianship, minutely responsive teamwork, an adventurous spirit and even a taste for improvisation. The Quartet’s repertoire ranges from Haydn and Mozart, cornerstones of the Classical repertoire, through the 19th and 20th centuries to contemporary composers and jazz. The Quatuor Ebène’s debut recording on Virgin Classics brings together the string quartets of the three emblematic French composers of the late 19th and early 20tb centuries: Fauré, Debussy and Ravel. The Debussy and Ravel quartets represent a traditional pairing in the catalogue, but they have rarely been coupled with the Fauré, his final work, composed in his late seventies. As it happens, Ravel dedicated his own quartet to Fauré, who was his teacher. “Interpreters of rare understanding and communicative flair” The Strad “There's a fluidity to the Ebène's playing… that suits the music's character, a mood of wistfulness too that the Ravel especially benefits from.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2008 “Dynamic ranges are wide, with Ravel's crescendos not underplayed in any mistaken attempt at classicism, and rubatos are applied with tactful expressivity.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2008 ***** “Among the many breathtaking moments on the Ebène Quartet's CD, there is one in particular that keeps calling one back. It occurs at around 1'14” into the Ravel's slow movement, the second set, which enters like a bittersweet memory before a literal recollection of the Quartet's opening motif. Other subtle details of interpretation include the chord at 2'03” that underpins a transformation of the first subject before the same chord leads directly into the second subject – and when it does, utterly changing in character, turning warmer, more openly inviting. The ebb and flow of the passage at 5'29” where the second subject rides above an arpeggiated accompaniment, music that looks both forwards to Debussy's own La mer and backwards to Rimsky's Sheherazade (or so it seems). There's a fluidity to the Ebène's playing of both works that suits the music's character, a mood of wistfulness too that the Ravel especially benefits from. This improvisatory approach is hardly surprising from an ensemble that is also celebrated for its jazz performances. It was a brilliant idea to include Fauré's late Quartet which, in a sense, provides the linchpin for all three works, the Ravel having been composed in Fauré's class to mark the 10th anniversary of Debussy's quartet, and which is dedicated to Fauré. An extraordinary work by any standards, ethereal and other-worldly with themes that seem constantly to be drawn skywards, Fauré's Quartet responds well to the Ebène's sensitised approach. Anyone requiring this particular trio of works won't be disappointed, which makes the various pairings of the Ravel and Debussy quartets on their own seem somewhat less enticing.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “it is the performance of the Fauré that makes this disc so rewarding. Late Fauré...is notoriously elusive, both melodically and harmonically. But the Ébène manage to make everything in the three-movement quartet seem perfectly logical, utterly natural and close in sensibility to the works by Debussy and Ravel that flank it.” The Guardian, 31st October 2008 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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