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| Bartok: String Quartets 1-6 | 
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| Creators: Bela Bartok, Belcea Quartet Label: EMI Category: Music
List Price: $23.98 Buy New: $18.22 You Save: $5.76 (24%)
Buy New/Used from $18.22
Avg. Customer Rating:   (1 reviews) Sales Rank: 52904
Format: Enhanced Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 94400 UPC: 094639440023 EAN: 0094639440023 ASIN: B000ZBPPWC
Release Date: February 5, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Album Description Bartok's string quartets are a true cornerstone of quartet repertoire. They communicate on various levels and are supremely effective on all of them. Whether viewed as a cycle or as six individual works, they remain masterpieces of formal design, every bar plainly part of a rounded grand plan, a plan securely placed within a wider framework. They can be mysterious, intimate, innovative, outspoken or earthy, while the infinite subtlety of their workings warrants a lifetime's study, and praise. The vibrant, young musical ambassadors of the Belcea Quartet have been playing all of Bartok's quartets extensively in the last few months and they will continue to feature heavily in their UK tour schedule in 2008. Highlights include concert performances of the complete cycle at the Wigmore Hall and Edinburgh Festival. The Belcea's interpretation of these quartets really captures the listeners' attention, the quartet commented: "The more we immersed ourselves in these works, the more beauty and richness we discovered in them and we very much hope that this appeal will even still increase in future because we definitely consider these quartets to be the greatest masterpieces of the last century in our repertoire." The First Quartet is the most romantic in spirit and actually harbours a love story. It marks an affectionate withdrawal from a late Romantic fin-de-siecle. The Second (1915-1917) takes us some way towards the gritty, hard-hitting Bartok of the mid-late 1920s. By 1927 Bartok, a superb pianist by any standards, was enjoying a worldwide concert career, and soaking up what that world had to offer in musical terms. One probable influence was Alban Berg's Lyric Suite, an expressive masterpiece that thrives on a plethora of complexities. Bartok's Third Quartet does likewise, a work that on one level seems to mimic a Hungarian rhapsody (the alternation of fast and slow music) while on the other takes tiny thematic cells and develops them into a teeming nest of musical activity. Bartok's next two quartets are both cast unconventionally in five movements of a symmetrical, arch-like design. The Fourth (1928) has at its centre an evocative though austere example of Bartok's 'night music' that opens with a rhapsodic cello solo leading in turn to imitated birdsong. The Fifth Quartet (1934) is built on a far larger scale. Bartok modifies the arch form by placing a scherzo at its centre, a syncopated dance movement in Bulgarian rhythm, framed by two slow movements using similar chord sequences. The air of ineffable sadness that hangs over Bartok's last quartet (1938) reflects not only a swiftly sickening Europe but personal tragedy: his mother's journey towards death would end in December 1939. All four movements open with the same, heart-rendering 'mesto' (sad) motto. Never has a quartet cycle ended quite so equivocally, or sounded a truer warning, one that even today inspires both awe and gratitude.
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| Customer Reviews:
  Bartok Quartets May 31, 2008 0 out of 6 found this review helpful
Years ago when I was in college the Bartok String Quartets were a constant on my stereo. I am happy to have this fine recording on CD. I had forgotten how much I enjoy listening to them.
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