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Borodin Quartet: Tchaikovsky String Quartets Nos. 1 & 2. Disc Review
Posted on September 24th, 2008 Comments
This is the Borodin Quartet in 1987, with Mikhail Kopeiman as first violin, playing repertoire that all but courses through the musicians’veins. The Tchaikovsky is deeply liomantic, played with a plush velvet sound iiid a liquid melodic fluency, but imbued always with a sense of purpose that brings direction to even the most motoric of the composer’s writing.The players’ phrasing is frequently aided by an easy rubato, and their performances occasionally take greater liberties. As Tchaikovsky scurries energetically to his climaxes he is aided by some unscheduled accelerandos, balanced by hefty ritenutos elsewhere, while in the first movement of Shostakovich’s Eighth Quartet the pulse comes from inside the music, and leaves the world of the metronome far behind.In other hands, such fluctuations could be mannered and irritating; here they seem not only natural but essential.The many facets of Tchaikovsky’s music are all given glittering life, from the turmoil in some of the outer movements to the exquisite opening of the Scherzo of the Second Quartet.
There Is crisp, clean playing in Shostakovich’s Third Quartet, and the great threnody of the Adagio is a masterpiece of controlled passion and concentration, in the Eighth Quartet, the refinement that has marked so much of the playing is subsumed beneath a rawness both emotional and sometimes literal.The second movement is violent, the bows snapping against the strings, and there is a scarily neurotic intensity to the third.
The performances were fiimed in the neo-classical surroundings of Henry Wood Hall in London, with an added bleak backdrop for the Shostakovich.


