Gabrieli Quartet, Borodin Quartet - Tchaikovsky, Borodin, Shostakovich: String Quartets (1990)
Artist: Gabrieli Quartet, Borodin Quartet
Title: Tchaikovsky, Borodin, Shostakovich: String Quartets
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Decca
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 75:41
Total Size: 406 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Tchaikovsky, Borodin, Shostakovich: String Quartets
Year Of Release: 1990
Label: Decca
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 75:41
Total Size: 406 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
String Quartet No.1 In D Major, Op.11 – Pyotr Tchaikovsky
1 I Moderato E Semplice 10:37
2 II Andante Cantabile 6:32
3 III Scherzo & Trio: Allegro Non Tanto E Con Fuoco 3:53
4 IV Finale: Allegro Giusto 6:50
String Quartet No.2 In D Major – Alexander Borodin
5 I Allegro Moderato
6 II Scherzo 4:44
7 III Notturno: Andante 8:09
8 IV Finale: Andante - Vivace 6:54
String Quartet No.8 In C Minor, Op.110 – Dmitri Shostakovich
9 I Largo - 4:24
10 II Allegro Molto - 2:43
11 III Allegretto - 3:59
12 IV Largo - 5:12
13 V Largo 3:25
Performers:
Gabrieli String Quartet:
Kenneth Sillito (violin I)
Brendan O’Reilly (violin II)
Ian Jewel (viola)
Keith Harvey (cello)
Borodin String Quartet:
Rostislav Dubinsky (violin I)
Jaroslav Alexandrov (violin II)
Dmitri Shebalin (viola)
Valentin Berlinsky (cello)
A slightly curious compilation (two Russian performances dating from 1962, one English from 1976) but an attractive one, and very good value. I had not heard the Gabrieli's Tchaikovsky before, and liked it a great deal: properly chamber-scale, in colour as well as tone of voice, and nice underlining of the lyricism in even Tchaikovsky's most exuberant pages. The Borodin play their eponymous composer's affectionate tribute to his wife with a charming demureness shading the ardour, and in the sharply characterized finale manage even to hint that Shostakovich (and in C minor after all this D major!) will be the next composer on the programme. He is, and their reading of his Eighth Quartet is nobly expressive as well as exhaustingly virtuoso. As a tiny bonus for Shostakovich scholars there is even an interesting variant reading towards the end of the third movement. The recordings still sound very well, slightly close but very clean for the Gabrieli, a little more open for the Borodin.