String Quartet
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String Quartet

5.0/5
Product ID: 28672594
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Group for Contemporary Music

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5.0

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T**E

essential!

a better mix than the Koch original.

A**S

Feldman on the cusp of his late period

Feldman felt he had created a masterpiece with his first string quartet, which gained the nickname "100 minutes" based on its first performance in NYC, May 4th, 1980, because it lasted well over 90 minutes. This recording from 1993 by the Group for Contemporary Music ( originally released on Koch in 1994 ), isn't quite that long -- it's only 78'35 long! In February, 1981 the String Quartet was performed at the CalArts Contemporary Music Festival, and Feldman later said that the audience was so full of tension that it was "like a lynch mob."Throughout the 1970s Feldman had written many works for orchestra, including his outstanding "still life" concerto works (ie, "Cello and Orchestra," "Piano and Orchestra," "Violin and Orchestra, etc). These works grew longer toward the end, but it was the String Quartet that launched Feldman into his late period preoccupation with very long chamber works. (Thanks to Douglas Cohen for the very informative liner notes!)The String Quartet of 1979 is full of variation, small to be sure, but in this sense transitional. The (in)famous second string quartet of 1983 represents the consolidation of Feldman's late "Turkish rug" period, marked by a reduction in variation to tiny changes on repeating patterns. This 1979 work has more in common with  PATTERNS IN A CHROMATIC FIELD  for cello and piano of 1981 (see my review) in its exploration of a wider range of possibilities, and more abrupt transitions, within the limited sonic terrain it occupies.A  second recording of the work was made by the Ives Ensemble in 2005 , and released in 2007 by Hat Hut. It is just ever-so-slightly shorter than this original GCM recording, clocking in at 76'57. There is a big difference in sound, though -- the Ives Ensemble is much sharper, indicating close miking of each instrument. The GCM by contrast sounds softer, air-brushed, perhaps recorded with one overhead microphone. At this point I would say the Ives Ensemble recording is definitive.It took me some time to warm up to the late Feldman, but I came around. I love  the 1970s still life works  (see my review of the CPO set with Zender conducting), but I have embraced the string quartets, and the  VIOLIN AND STRING QUARTET  as well (see my review of the hatHUT recording). There is a recording of the second String Quartet by the Ives Ensemble on hatHUT that is "only" 5 hours long, on 4 discs instead of the 5 discs it takes to hold the 6-hour recording by the Flux Quartet for Mode, that has not appeared on this site. It is superb.(verified purchase from the Cosmic Record Emporium)

A**S

Feldman on the cusp of his late period

Feldman felt he had created a masterpiece with his first string quartet, which gained the nickname "100 minutes" based on its first performance in NYC, May 4th, 1980, because it lasted well over 90 minutes. This recording from 1993 by the Group for Contemporary Music ( reissued by Naxos  in 2006), isn't quite that long -- it's only 78 minutes! In February, 1981 the String Quartet was performed at the CalArts Contemporary Music Festival, and Feldman later said that the audience was so full of tension that it was "like a lynch mob." Throughout the 1970s Feldman had written many works for orchestra, including his outstanding "still life" concerto works (ie, "Cello and Orchestra," "Piano and Orchestra," "Violin and Orchestra, etc). These works grew longer toward the end, but it was the String Quartet that launched Feldman into his late period preoccupation with very long chamber works. (Thanks to Douglas Cohen for the very informative liner notes!)The String Quartet of 1979 is full of variation, small to be sure, but in this sense transitional. The (in)famous second string quartet of 1983 represents the consolidation of Feldman's late "Turkish rug" period, marked by a reduction in variation to tiny changes on repeating patterns. This 1979 work has more in common with  PATTERNS IN A CHROMATIC FIELD  for cello and piano of 1981 (see my review) in its exploration of a wider range of possibilities, and more abrupt transitions, within the limited sonic terrain it occupies.It took me some time to warm up to the late Feldman, but I came around. I love  the 1970s still life works  (see my review of the CPO set with Zender conducting), but I have embraced the string quartets, and the  VIOLIN AND STRING QUARTET  as well (see my review of the hatHUT recording). There is a recording of the second String Quartet by the Ives Ensemble on hatHUT that is "only" 5 hours long, on 4 discs instead of the 5 discs it takes to hold the 6-hour recording by the Flux Quartet for Mode, that has not appeared on this site. It is superb, and available via Cadence Magazine.See my FELDMAN: A LISTENER'S GUIDE list for more recommendations and reviews of the music of one of the finest late 20th century composers.

P**R

Five Stars

very good work.

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