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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Varied, Top-Notch Mendelssohn, September 26, 2001
By A Customer
There are many strengths to celebrate in this recording. First, the music. The two quartets represent Mendelssohn at his finest, yet they explore the antipodes of his emotional spectrum. The Quartet No. 6, a late work written soon after the death of the composer's beloved sister Fanny, is unlike almost any Mendelssohn that had come before. Whereas Mendelssohn seemed addicted to the minor key throughout his carer, most of the drama in his minor-key works seems canned, especially when compared to the passion and torment of Beethoven's or Schumann's minor-key excursions. But in the Quartet No. 6, the passion is real. The first movement is a whirlwind of restless energy, lacking any comfort. None is offered in the second movement, not a typical Mendelssohn scherzo but a sort of witches' dance, bleak and macabre in feeling. Respite of a sort comes in the elegiac slow movement, achingly nostalgic as it is. None of the mawdlin sentiments Mendelssohn is guilty of in some of his earlier slow music: This is clearly a deeply felt lament for Fanny. The last movement is again restless, almost demonic, in the manner of the last movement of Schubert's Death and the Maiden Quartet.Then comes the Quartet No. 3, perhaps my favorite Mendelssohn quartet, a sunny and expansive work in the manner of the composer's Italian Symphony. The first movement starts very much like that symphony's first movement, with a bright theme stated over tremolos in the lower strings. A tender second theme is finally dominated by the buoyant first theme, which propels the movement to one of the most memorable of Mendelssohn's codas. As in the Italian Symphony, the first movement is a hard act to follow, but the delicate minuet second movement and andante provide a lovely melodiousness before the whirlwind finale concludes the quartet in a spritely fashion. The Capriccio and Fugue are sizable chunks from the workman's bench and are both welcome as well, especially with the loving care the Aurora String Quartet lavishes on them. In fact, the Aurora is just about perfect in this music. The integration of the quartet is a wonder, but the solo playing of the members, especially the first violin (Sharon Grebanier), are equally remarkable. I haven't enjoyed the Third Quartet so much since the virtuoso performance I heard the golden-era Julliard give on an old Epic recording (that goes back a way!). The recording, made in a resonant hall that does not in any way compromise the lifelike presence of the quartet, is very fine as well. In short, this is all around top-notch Mendelssohn. At Naxos' price, it's can't-go-wrong Mendelssohn.
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