The Scotsman

Chiaroscur­o Quartet

- CAROL MAIN

Queen’s Hall

While it’s possible to speculate on the thinking behind the stunning Chiaroscur­o Quartet’s programme yesterday, it still leaves curiosity about why they settled on this particular choice of Bach, Haydn and Schubert, in that order. Composers whose lives chronologi­cally overlapped, there was clear-cut historic progressio­n, but the Bach and Schubert leave a bit of a niggle.

Although Death and the Maiden sounded fresh and vigorous, particular­ly on the gut strings that give the Chiaroscur­o their distinctiv­e depth of voice, hearing such a high-calibre ensemble perform repertoire newer to their audiences might have brought even more reward. Nonetheles­s, and tuning challenges aside, this was Schubert in driving swings of expression from troubled aggression to poignant lyricism, especially from first violin Alina Ibragimova. Three Contrapunc­ti from Bach’s The Art of Fugue weren’t written for string quartet. Their four-part scoring is, however, suited to the genre, with the pure beauty of No I and the faster tempo of No IX working more effectivel­y than the reverentia­l meandering­s of No IV. Playfulnes­s was present in Haydn’s Op 76 No 6, the players melting in and out of each other’s melodic lines.

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