Concord String Quartet - American String Quartets 1950-1970 (1995)
Artist: Concord String Quartet, The Concord String Quartet
Title: American String Quartets 1950-1970
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Vox Box
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:28:47
Total Size: 617 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: American String Quartets 1950-1970
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Vox Box
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:28:47
Total Size: 617 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Disc 1
1. String Quartet: I. Crochet = 92 (08:27)
2. String Quartet: II. Crochet = 144 (09:11)
3. String Quartet (11:56)
4. String Quartet in 4 Parts: I. Quietly Flowing Along (04:44)
5. String Quartet in 4 Parts: II. Slowly Rocking (05:06)
6. String Quartet in 4 Parts: III. Nearly Stationary (10:33)
7. String Quartet in 4 Parts: IV. Quodlibet (01:26)
8. String Quartet No. 3 (18:07)
9. Summer (04:39)
Disc 2
1. Black Angels, 13 Images from the Dark Land "Images I": No. 1, Departure (06:12)
2. Black Angels, 13 Images from the Dark Land "Images I": No. 2, Absence (06:48)
3. Black Angels, 13 Images from the Dark Land "Images I": No. 3, Return (09:51)
4. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: I. Theme I (01:20)
5. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: II. Variations (05:33)
6. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: III. Theme II (01:20)
7. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: IV. Variations (08:03)
8. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: V. Theme III (01:20)
9. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: VI. Variations (08:04)
10. String Quartet No. 5 in Quarter Tones: VII. Theme IV (01:14)
11. String Quartet No. 2 (18:46)
12. Structures (05:57)
Covering the most fertile decades of the avant-garde movement in the United States, American String Quartets, 1950-1970 is a comprehensive survey of the most influential works in this concentrated genre. Broadly divided, these quartets represent either the full-flowering of post-Webern serialism or the more esoteric, philosophical conceptions of the group associated with John Cage. Several rely on tone rows and serial methods, notably the intensely organized quartets of Stefan Wolpe, Jacob Druckman, and Lejaren Hiller's controlled experiment with quarter tones. The works of Cage, Earle Brown, Christian Wolff, and Morton Feldman are more freely derived, and their ideas range from the extreme pointillism of Wolff's Summer to the proto-ambience of Feldman's Structures. Somewhat outside the serial/intuitive dichotomy are Leon Kirchner's String Quartet No. 3 and George Crumb's Black Angels. Both are augmented with electronic sounds or additional instruments, and the coloristic possibilities of the quartet are expanded in these innovative pieces. The Concord String Quartet made its debut with this recording, and it is wholly persuasive. Although its reading of Black Angels was arguably surpassed by the Kronos Quartet, the rest of the performances may be considered definitive. The digital transfer of the analog tapes is clean, but the original VoxBox LPs may be preferred for their warmer sound. © Blair Sanderson