Ligeti: String Quartets Nos 1 & 2; Bartók: String Quartet No 4 (BIS)
★★★★☆
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It’s 30 years since I heard Gyorgy Ligeti clarify why he was permitting his first string quartet to be carried out after 4 many years mendacity in a drawer. The quartet, composed in 1954, was too near its sources. “It’s Bartók’s seventh,” mentioned Ligeti, “however I’ve now realised that’s not such a foul factor.”
Titled Metamorphoses Nocturnes, the quartet has buzzing bugs, whispering grasses and lots of issues that go bump within the night time. In amidst the feral noises there are wistful traces of melody and a macabre sense of humour, blacker by far than Bartók’s Bluebeard. Every so often, a Haydn chord is heard. Consider it as a bridge between pre- and post-war modernism, written below the heavy hand of Hungarian state communism. Two years later, Ligeti fled west.
His second quartet, dated 1968, is likewise transitional. Written in a revolutionary 12 months, it opens with an Allegro nervosa by which the composer departs from Boulez-Stockhausen serialism right into a frank and brutal encounter with real-world music that folks would possibly wish to hear. As ever in Ligeti, there may be waspish wit, nasty moments and episodes of transcendental calm and delicacy. Ligeti is the least predictable of composers, essentially the most satisfying to a questing thoughts, the right antidote to end-of-year mush.
Between the 2 Ligetis, the Marmen Quartet ship Bartók’s fourth string quartet of 1928, Mozartian by comparability with its neighbours.
The hour-long album is lustily and lyrically performed by 4 Europeans who met in 2013 on the Royal School of Music, earlier than London turned too Brexity tough for continentals to finish their research. The Marmens, cast in a special age, remind us of a lot that has been misplaced, not least an inexpensive alternative to discover Ligeti’s bumpetty world, on the market on the fringe of the identified universe.
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