Readers
of this blog will know that I am a big fan of the string quartet.
This evening it was a return to Beethoven's B flat major quartet,
Opus 130; this time played by the Hagen Quartett in 2001. Such
incredible music. I love the Hagen Quartett's rendition, although at
times it brought to mind Carl Flesch's critique of Bronisław
Huberman: 'He either whispers, or he shouts'. The Hagens often
whisper, and sometimes shout. Headphones are needed for listening,
otherwise some things are lost.
This
is the only Beethoven string quartet where I do not automatically
gravitate towards the Busch Quartet's 1941 recording (why one earth did Busch leave it so late?) as my first
choice, since the Busch did not finish with the Grosse Fuga, but with
Beethoven's make-shift, get-you-home finale that friends, players and
publishers persuaded him to substitute. The Fuga finishes this
quartet superbly, after the magnificent Cavatina. 'That is where the
rot set in' remarked Benjamin Britten perceptively, identifying the
composer's divorce from sponsors, patrons, listeners and performers
in Opus 133 (as the original finale later became). Beethoven was
right, and sponsors, patrons, listeners and performers were wrong,
but Beethoven's “poisonous fruit” was borne out around 100 years
later by the transitory dodecaphonists, with their abandonment of
harmony and melody, thus vindicating Britten's forebodings. If you
want to write “pure” music and forget about everyone else, you
have to be a really great composer.
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