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Hagen Quartet - Beethoven, Mozart, Webern

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Hagen Quartet - Beethoven, Mozart, Webern

Streichquartett Nr. 8 e-moll op. 59 Nr. 2 "Rasumowsky-Quartett 2"

    1 1. Allegro 
    2 2. Molto adagio
    3 3. Allegretto 
    4 4. Finale: Presto

Streichquartett Nr. 16 Es-Dur KV 428 (421b) "4. Haydn-Quartett"

    5 1. Allegro non troppo 
    6 2. Andante con moto 
    7 3. Menuetto: Allegretto - Trio
    8 4. Allegro vivace 

Sätze für Streichquartett op. 5 Nr. 1-5

    9 Nr. 1: Heftig bewegt
    10 Nr. 2: Sehr langsam 
    11 Nr. 3: Sehr bewegt 
    12 Nr. 4: Sehr langsam 
    13 Nr. 5: In zarter Bewegung 

Bagatellen für Streichquartett op. 9 Nr. 1-6

    14 Nr. 1: Mäßig 
    15 Nr. 2: Leicht bewegt 
    16 Nr. 3: Ziemlich fließend 
    17 Nr. 4: Sehr langsam 
    18 Nr. 5: Äußerst langsam 
    19 Nr. 6: Fließend

Lukas Hagen, violin
Rainer Schmidt, violin
Veronika Hagen, viola
Clemens Hagen, violoncello

 

The program looks like what was conventional in the 1970s and 1980s: Beethoven, Mozart, and the obligatory entry from the early 20th century, in this case Webern. But what you get from Germany's Hagen Quartet, here celebrating its 30th anniversary, is anything but conventional. The group members state that their aim is "to illustrate such things as pauses, fermati, dissonances, and certain extreme emotional phenomena as vividly as possible." Indeed, this is a set of hyper-expressive performances. For an example, look no further than the finale of Mozart's String Quartet in E flat major, K. 428, where the quartet blows through the rhythmic regularity of the opening phrases on the way to a total roller coaster ride of unexpected phrasing and constantly shifting treatments of the piece's already humorous and often intentionally deceptive pattern of silences and consequent-antecedent pairs. The extraordinarily un-dancelike minuet is likewise on the far edges of an ordinary conception of the work. The intense Beethoven String Quartet in E minor, Op. 59/2, is paradoxically not quite so extreme, but the beautifully reverent Molto Adagio movement is one of the highlights of the disc. The nicely matched pair of early atonal (and not twelve-tone) Webern works for quartet makes a perfect conclusion, with the tension of the extreme contrasts of the Five Movements for String Quartet, Op. 5, seeming to explode into the little bits that constitute the Bagatelles for string quartet, Op. 9, pieces just a minute or so long. Your mileage certainly may vary with this often idiosyncratic disc, but the Myrios label's super audio sound is superb, and one thing's for sure: it's never boring. ---James Manheim, Rovi

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Last Updated (Monday, 14 October 2013 16:52)

 

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