Krise/Crisis
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Rubicon
Magazine Review Date: 03/2023
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 84
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: RCD1102

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Die Worte des Erlösers am Kreuze, Movement: Introduktion |
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Hasta pulverizarse los ojos |
Francesco Ciurlo, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Die Worte des Erlösers am Kreuze, Movement: Mich duerstet |
Joseph Haydn, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 14, 'Death and the Maiden', Movement: Scherzo (allegro molto) |
Franz Schubert, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 6, Movement: Mesto - Piu mosso pesente. Vivace |
Béla Bartók, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 8, Movement: Largo |
Dmitri Shostakovich, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Krise |
Birke Bertelsmeier, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
WTC 9/11, Movement: WTC |
Steve Reich, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Spring |
Sogomon Komitas, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 6, Movement: Adagio |
Felix Mendelssohn, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 1, 'From my life', Movement: Vivace |
Bedřich Smetana, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
String Quartet No. 1, 'The Kreutzer Sonata' |
Leoš Janáček, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Post |
Oscar Escudero, Composer
Kuss Quartet |
Author: Richard Whitehouse
There have already been various projects centred on the concept of social and cultural breakdown throughout the extended pandemic of 2020 21, the Berlin-based Kuss Quartet adding the issue of renewed European conflict into this equation with their latest release.
Opening with its plangent take on the introduction from Haydn’s Eastertide meditations, the first part continues with Francesco Ciurlo’s intensive interplay between harmonic stasis and rhythmic dynamism – ‘until your eyeballs explode’ alluding to concentration as a process fraught with its destruction. Next the searching plaintiveness of Haydn’s Fifth Last Word, then the wistfulness surrounded by aggression of the Scherzo from Schubert’s Death and the Maiden Quartet.
Heading towards decisiveness then back towards indecision, the first movement of Bartók’s Sixth Quartet contrasts with the unalloyed emotional numbness in that from Shostakovich’s Eighth Quartet – segueing into Birke Bertelsmeier interpreting ‘Crisis’ in terms of a volatile superimposition of distorted memories. Reich conjures the destruction of 9/11 in inscrutable terms, before Komitas evokes the actuality of genocide with a fatalistic pathos.
The soulful strains of the third movement from Mendelssohn’s Sixth Quartet usher in a third part duly countered with the elation, ultimately collapsing into resignation, of the finale from Smetana’s First Quartet. Including the quartet by Janáček complete might have unbalanced the sequence but this performance sustains unremitting focus up to the expressive anguish of its finale, from where Oscar Escudero’s fractured algorithmic simulation of musical Classicism makes for a darkly humorous portent of what might well become normality within a ‘Post’-pandemic dystopia.
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