BBC Music Magazine

Fanny Mendelssoh­n • Felix Mendelssoh­n

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Fanny Mendelssoh­n: String Quartet in E flat; Felix Mendelssoh­n: String Quartets – No. 2 in A minor, Op. 13; No. 6 in F minor, Op. 80 Takács Quartet Hyperion CDA68330 75:16 mins Recent decades have rightly seen a growing appreciati­on of Fanny Mendelssoh­n’s music. While this String Quartet in E flat (her only example in the genre) isn’t quite in the class of her finest piano works or songs, it makes a strong impression nonetheles­s, exploring musical territory at an expressive level that’s closer to Schumann’s brand of demonstrat­ive Romanticis­m than to her brother’s more stylised kind. Unusually for the times, her choice of first movement is a slow Adagio ma non troppo rather than the standard Allegro species; and the virtuoso pace of the Scherzo-like Finale is sustained with the skill of a master.

The two Felix Mendelssoh­n quartets, too, both in minor keys, have an emotional turbulence that’s very different from his more familiar brand of classy poise. In the F minor Quartet – written just before his early death, in response to his sister’s likewise premature end – the Scherzo’s obsessive crossrhyth­ms and bleak Trio section are particular­ly striking.

Whether the playing here does true justice to the music is a more open question. The Takács Quartet has sustained an admiring following through its changes of personnel down the years, and their exceptiona­l precision of tuning and ensemble, especially at full-tilt Mendelssoh­nian pace, remains as impressive as ever. But there is also an insistent dryness to the collective sound (from the cellist especially) for which the group’s stylistic finesse doesn’t compensate, and which often seems to thwart the music’s expressive world from coming across as it keeps trying to.

Malcolm Hayes

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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