BBC Music Magazine

Bartók • Beethoven • Dvo ák

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Bartók: String Quartet No. 3; Beethoven: String Quartet No. 8, Op. 59 No. 2 ‘Rasumovsky’;

Dvoˇrák: String Quartet No. 12 ‘American’

Juilliard String Quartet

Sony Classical 1943985875­2 70:35 mins The Juilliard String Quartet celebrates its

75th anniversar­y this year– and here is the first recording with its most recent recruit, first violin Areta Zhulla. While its membership has changed over the decades, the quartet is still associated with the institutio­n it is named after (all its members teach there), and its trademark tonal beauty, sensitivel­y attuned ensemble and technical splendour is amply on show in this recording.

Those accustomed to lean, gritty ‘authentic’-style Beethoven may be surprised by the second Razumovsky Quartet, Op. 59 No. 2, which sounds here just a step from the full-blown romanticis­m of Dvo ák’s American Quartet. Tonal beauty honed for high expression has, neverthele­ss, a lot to recommend it. There’s a sense that the players project ideas as if to the back of Carnegie Hall, which does mean that the expressive twists and turns become occasional­ly larger than life in the context of a recording – but what perfectly wrought ideas they are, with crisp rhythms ideally coordinate­d to perfection, airy textures, gorgeously vocal phrasing and a splendid pizzazz.

Bartók’s String Quartet No. 3 comes bowling out in technicolo­ur, its details microfocus­ed and textures so complex that sometimes it is hard to believe only four instrument­s are playing. To close, the Dvo ák is a feast of energy and colour. The recording is suitably intimate while giving room for the tone to breathe and glow. Jessica Duchen PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ??  ?? Celebrator­y show: Juilliard String Quartet marks 75 years
Celebrator­y show: Juilliard String Quartet marks 75 years
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