As the quartet's recordings indicate, at least to these ears, the Bartók third quartet was the apex of the program. A terse tour de force without movement breaks, it is perfectly suited to the Emerson's intense, muscular style. Through all of the work's buzzing insect calls, folk cantillations, spiky dissonant chords, and eerie glissandi, the four players were united in scalpel-like precision. While the Bartók quartets may be a hard sell to first-time listeners in recording (as Jens has pointed out before), the appeal of a live performance, especially as icily robust as this one, is visceral (meaning that it has the effect of a punch in the guts). This is probably true even if it did, by one report, give the impression of hearing your parents fight and not being able to say anything. If anything, the Emerson's interpretation of this quartet is stronger, more refined than their recording, made almost 20 years ago.
Emerson Quartet: Brahms Bartók |
Anne Midgette, The Allusionist (Washington Post, January 22) |
There is only one Emerson Quartet concert remaining in the Smithsonian Resident Associates series, featuring both Brahms string sextets (May 10). Violist Lawrence Dutton will also give a solo recital, with violinist Elizabeth Lim-Dutton and pianist Marija Ilic (February 2). All concerts begin at 6 pm, in the auditorium of the National Museum of Natural History.
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