It has been one of those weeks: this post makes nine concerts reviewed over nine days. That is not a complaint, as having too much music to hear is always better than having too little. Sunday was the 237th anniversary of the (presumed) birthday of Ludwig van Beethoven (December 16, 1770), and the National Gallery of Art and the Embassy Series joined forces to bring the Leipziger Streichquartett to Washington for a sampling of the group's extensive Beethoven discography. The last time that Ionarts reviewed the Leipzig Quartet, it was in 2004 at the Library of Congress, but the group is regularly mentioned in our reviews of new string quartet recordings as a reliable gold standard for many works. Three of the members who founded the group in 1998 were principals in Leipzig's Gewandhaus Orchestra, and there is a venerable, traditional sense to the quartet's sound and stylistic approach.
Leipzig Quartet's Beethoven: Op. 18, no. 6 Op. 95 ("Serioso") Op. 132 ("Heiliger Dankgesang") |
Next it was op. 95, a dense, driven, and somber work (nicknamed "Serioso") that is an excellent choice to represent the middle period (last heard from the Borodin Quartet in 2005) -- the recent recording by the Takács Quartet was one of the Ionarts Ten Best Recordings of 2005. The crackling motifs of the first movement in this performance underscored Beethoven's memories of the artillery sounds of Napoleon's siege of Vienna, later soothed by the warm second movement. There was an almost panicked urgency to the third movement, except for its pastoral trio, and especially the fourth, where the agitation almost crept over the edge, to exciting effect.
As a celebration of Beethoven's life, it is hard to imagine a better choice for a late-period quartet than the mysterious, quasi-liturgical op. 132 ("Heiliger Dankgesang," from 1825). Its third movement, a Lydian-mode song of thanksgiving for Beethoven's recovery from illness, became the psalm of solemn gratitude from the hearts of generations of Beethoven's devoted listeners. The Leipzig Quartet played a perfectly tuned, pure, and unified rendition. With almost no vibrato and careful attention to each note and line, its celestial ending left the quartet visibly exhausted. The bubbly, joyous second movement contained an enigmatic contrast with its own drone-based trio, a moment of Arcadian repose. The appealing fifth movement was so forceful that the tone of the strings was occasionally distorted slightly, but it was a remarkably precise and controlled performance. The encore was introduced with the words, "What is better than music by Beethoven? For us, music by Bach." A contained, quasi-monastic reading of the latter's chorale Nun sich der Tag geendet hat (see this beautiful 17th-century English version) sealed the spirit of musical prayer.
If you missed the Leipzig Quartet this week, they will soon be returning for a U.S. tour (February 17 to 27, 2008). The next classical concert at the National Gallery of Art will feature a Viennese New Year's program played by the National Gallery Orchestra with guest conductor (and Ionarts favorite) José Serebrier and soprano Carole Farley.
Now that the sun doth shine no more,
And day hath reach'd its close,
They calmly sleep who wept before,
The wearied find repose.And if this night my last should prove
In this dark land, I pray
Then take me to Thy heaven above,
The home of endless day.
Really looking forward to this concert! I am finding out about all these concerts from their weekly music email newsletters.
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