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Joseph Haydn: String Quartets, Op. 50

Quatuor Zaïde

Classical - Released November 17, 2015 | NoMadMusic

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Haydn: Quatuors à cordes

Quatuor Ébène

Chamber Music - Released October 2, 2005 | Mirare

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Haydn: String Quartets, Op. 76

Quatuor Mosaïques

Chamber Music - Released April 25, 2000 | naïve

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Mozart: The 6 String Quartets Dedicated to Haydn

Quatuor Cambini-Paris

Chamber Music - Released January 26, 2015 | Ambroisie - naïve

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Haydn: Quatuors à cordes, Op. 33, Nos. 5, 3 & 2

Quatuor Mosaïques

Chamber Music - Released January 1, 1996 | naïve classique

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Erdödy, Joseph Haydn: String Quartets, Op. 76

Quatuor Akos

Quartets - Released March 31, 2023 | NoMadMusic

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Janáček: Piano Works, Vol. 1

Radoslav Kvapil

Classical - Released January 1, 1993 | Supraphon a.s.

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Robert Schumann: Piano Works

Llyr Williams

Classical - Released January 12, 2024 | Signum Records

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Pianist Llŷr Williams has built a following with recordings of Beethoven and Schubert, and with this double album, he plows forward into Schumann; the works on the album are mostly early, so one assumes that this is the first in a cycle. The appearance of the album on classical best-seller charts in early 2024 should encourage the folks at Signum Classics to proceed. Williams is a sober player whose style may remind listeners of a certain age of Rudolf Serkin. He has remarkable control in the larger pieces that frame the program here, the Fantasy, Op. 17, and the Faschingsschwank aus Wien, Op. 26. He certainly doesn't lack control in the smaller pieces, either. The issue is that these pieces, especially lately, have been treated, backed by Schumann's own writings and programmatic descriptions, as examples of free fantasy. It is not that Williams' playing is inexpressive, but he tends to let the fantastic in Schumann's music speak for itself. Sample the brief "Ungeduldig" ("Impatient") fourth movement of the Davidsbündlertänze, Op. 6, which few would call impatient. Williams' playing in the Papillons, Op. 2, is exquisitely delicate, and throughout, there is a fine sense of line. He has an approach that is unorthodox in Schumann, and that is all to the good. However, listeners should do some sampling to see how well they take to it. Producer Judith Sherman records the album well at a pair of locations at St. Paul's School and the Wyastone Estate, capturing the clarity of Williams' performances.© James Manheim /TiVo
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Haydn: String Quartets, Op. 20, Volume 1, Nos. 2, 3 & 5

Dudok Quartet Amsterdam

Chamber Music - Released September 27, 2019 | Resonus Classics

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Fresh from their latest accolade as winners of a Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award, the critically lauded Dudok Quartet Amsterdam embarks on a new project dedicated to Franz Joseph Haydn’s six Op. 20 String Quartets. This first installment of two volumes sees the quartet explore the C major, G minor and F minor quartets. With some of the most celebrated works from the quartet repertoire, the Dudok Quartet relish delving into the monumental and dramatic gestures within Haydn’s highly developed rhetorical style. © Resonus
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Not all cats are grey

Quatuor Hanson

Quartets - Released October 29, 2021 | Aparté

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When it comes to French string quartets, Autumn 2021 has been notably nocturnal-flavoured. First there was the superb “round midnight” from the genre’s rockstars, Quatuor Ébène – a programme of music for after dark that paired Dutilleux’s Ainsi la nuit of 1976 with a quartet arrangement of Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (1899), bridged by a new jazz-infused work by the quartet’s cellist-composer Raphaël Merlin. Now here’s “Not all cats are grey” from one of France’s most exciting new generation quartets, Quatuor Hanson, whose own night-themed trio of works has the Dutilleux sitting at its climax, preceded by Bartók’s String Quartet in A minor of 1917 – metaphorically representing a dark time for Europe, and studied by Dutilleux before he wrote his own quartet – and Ligeti’s String Quartet No 1 “Métamorphoses nocturnes” of 1954. Beyond having one of the smile-eliciting album titles of the year, “Not all cats are grey” also thoroughly delivers on its actual contents. If you’re wondering what the title actually refers to, it’s the fact that at night time all cats suddenly look grey on account on it being more difficult to distinguish separate colours, and that in the same way it can be all too easy to hear so-called contemporary music as all sounding the same. The Hanson’s mission is therefore to bring out the myriad of contrasts between these three major works via a multi-hued night time musical landscape representing everything from sleep, dreams and hallucination, to liveliness and intense movement; and they’ve very much achieved that aim. First thing to say is that there’s a very satisfying balance to the programme’s overall architecture, thanks to their having placed the Dutilleux and Ligeti – each a series of micro-movements heard as a single movement which organically develops an initial motivic idea – as their two-book-ends; and you’re hearing an equal degree of architecture across the interpretations themselves, on both the macro and micro level. Tone and articulation-wise, there’s just the right, brightly crystal-edged, lucid-textured sound that served them so well in their Diapason Award-winning Haydn recording of 2019. Favourite snapshots? How about the exhilarating bite, folky kick, momentum and technical precision of the Ligeti’s Vivace, capriccio; then the similar qualities they bring to the even more obviously folky strains of the following Bartók’s central Allegro molto capriccioso; the slender-toned delicacy with which they open the Bartók’s Lento, and the dramatic tautness with which its long lines then proceed; the gorgeous gossamer wisps heard in the Dutilleux’s Nocturne 2, and the nimbleness, colouristic range and sense of organic progression they bring to that entire work’s exploration of different sound effects. Essentially, I won’t be surprised if this album ends up picking up an award or two, too. © Charlotte Gardner/Qobuz
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Louise Farrenc: Etudes & Variations for Solo Piano

Joanne Polk

Classical - Released February 7, 2020 | Steinway and Sons

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Mozart: Piano Sonatas, Vol. 1: K. 279, 283, 332 & 570

Christian Zacharias

Classical - Released March 6, 2020 | Warner Classics

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Nimrod Borenstein: Concerto for Piano & Orchestra, Op. 91, Light and Darkness, Op. 80 & Shirim, Op. 94

Clelia Iruzun

Classical - Released January 20, 2023 | SOMM Recordings

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Invisible

Quatuor Zaïde

Chamber Music - Released April 28, 2023 | NoMadMusic

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Haydn: The Complete String Quartets

Quatuor à cordes Aeolian

Classical - Released January 1, 1997 | Decca Music Group Ltd.

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Brahms, Haydn, Enesco

Antal Doráti

Symphonic Music - Released January 1, 1993 | Decca Music Group Ltd.

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Haydn - Bartók - Mozart

Quatuor Modigliani

Classical - Released February 5, 2021 | Mirare

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions Diapason d'or
Revered since the height of the Classical era up to the simmering years of the 20th century, the string quartet represented an ideal genre to which composers entrusted their most innovative ideas. The Modigliani Quartet illuminates these brillant masterpieces, each bearing witness to a turning point in the lives of their authors. Brimming with poetry, audacity and a thirst for life, the singular narratives of these quartets herald the advent of new horizons. © Mirare