I’m
not sure what the members of the Danish Quartet, who recorded the
Nielsen quartets more than effectively in 1992 (Kontrapunkt, 10/93),
think about a “young” incarnation appearing 15 years later. But I hope
they would doff their caps in admiration, because these new recordings
are top-notch, and I’m happy to echo and endorse the enthusiasm they
have already generated in Denmark.
The benchmark recording has
been that of the Kontra Quartet, sympathetic
interpretations of works which do not enshrine the absolute finest of
Nielsen, for all that he was an orchestral violinist and an experienced
and enthusiastic performer of string quartets. But the new Quartet, all
in their early twenties, bring a freshness and energy plus a level of
sheer accomplishment that I don’t ever remember hearing in these works.
Far from defensiveness or special pleading, they simply assume that they
are playing high quality music and that their job is therefore to give
it their all. The results are joyous, effervescent.
The First Quartet is the most striking beneficiary, since it can too easily sound texturally over-written and structurally effortful, as in the finale’s contrived “Résumé”. Such reservations are hard to entertain while listening to this thoroughly infectious account. Nielsen asks for energy in the first movement, and that is what the Young Danish Quartet give him, along with large-scale sweep and mellifluous tone throughout. The Fourth Quartet, a tough-minded cousin to the comic opera Maskarade, is interpretatively more challenging, and the Young Danish Quartet may in future find more subtly shaded routes through it; in the meantime their expressive candour and passion are entirely to the good. They are joined in the Quintet by Tim Frederiksen, under whom they studied at the Royal Conservatory in Copenhagen, and without quite transmuting base metal into gold, they display the various facets of what was a breakthrough piece for the young Nielsen to their best advantage. (David Fanning / Gramophone)
The First Quartet is the most striking beneficiary, since it can too easily sound texturally over-written and structurally effortful, as in the finale’s contrived “Résumé”. Such reservations are hard to entertain while listening to this thoroughly infectious account. Nielsen asks for energy in the first movement, and that is what the Young Danish Quartet give him, along with large-scale sweep and mellifluous tone throughout. The Fourth Quartet, a tough-minded cousin to the comic opera Maskarade, is interpretatively more challenging, and the Young Danish Quartet may in future find more subtly shaded routes through it; in the meantime their expressive candour and passion are entirely to the good. They are joined in the Quintet by Tim Frederiksen, under whom they studied at the Royal Conservatory in Copenhagen, and without quite transmuting base metal into gold, they display the various facets of what was a breakthrough piece for the young Nielsen to their best advantage. (David Fanning / Gramophone)
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