Janáček's programmatic String Quartet No. 1 ("Kreutzer Sonata") opened the program. The first violinist addressed the audience, speaking about the lovely slow theme taken from Beethoven that Janáček modifies and uses rhetorically in the third movement, to contrast the brooding scuffle representing the murderous husband of the story. The concise work, four movements all marked with some tempo variation of "Con moto," turns on a dime from one emotion to another. A sense of innocently confused questioning is evoked in the second movement, which could represent the conflicted wife in Tolstoy's novella.
Ivan Hewitt, Takács Quartet, Queen Elizabeth Hall, review (The Telegraph, October 20) Andrew Clements, Takács Quartet – review (The Guardian, October 19) |
Hear the Takács Quartet at the Théâtre de la Ville, playing Ravel, Bartók, Dvořák, and Haydn. Click on the icon of the headphones to start the streaming audio. [France Musique]
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