A PANUFNIK String Quartets Nos 1 - 3 LUTOSŁAWSKI String Quartet
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Andrzej Panufnik, Witold Lutoslawski
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Naxos
Magazine Review Date: 01/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 79
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 8 573164
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
String Quartet No. 1, `Prelude-Transformations-Pos |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Tippett Quartet |
String Quartet No. 2, `Messages' |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Tippett Quartet |
String Quartet No. 3, `Wycinanki' |
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer
Andrzej Panufnik, Composer Tippett Quartet |
String Quartet |
Witold Lutoslawski, Composer
Tippett Quartet Witold Lutoslawski, Composer |
Author: Ivan Moody
These are vital performances, edgy and energetic but rich in tone: the Brodskys are more convincing at the ethereal, I feel, at such moments as the ‘Transformations’ movement of Quartet No 1, but both approaches serve the music equally well. One of the most memorable things here is the way Quartet No 2 appears as though from nowhere, only gradually acquiring sonic substance, the apparently extraterrestrial opening melting and becoming more earthly; and something similar happens with the Quartet No 3, written in the year before the composer died. It is subtitled Wycinanki, a reference to the Polish tradition of paper cuts, and the work’s apparent fragility reflects that ephemeral art form. But, as Richard Whitehouse points out in his notes, the work is also ‘didactic’, in an inimitably Panufnikian way, and thoroughly explores different aspects of quartet-playing, aspects clearly relished by the Tippetts.
The choice of the Lutosawski Quartet to round out the disc is inspired because it so neatly and clearly demonstrates the differences between these two Polish composers. After the Panufnik works it sounds bright and acerbic but placing it thus at the end of the programme also enables the listener to hear the tightly structured way in which both composers worked, however different the final results. A really fine disc, excellently played and beautifully recorded.
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