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Armida Quartet’s “seven-league-boot” journey across the realm of fugue begins with the two earliest published German works in the genre for instrumental ensemble from the year 1602 by baroque German composer Valentin Hausmann (1560-1614). Haussmann’s Fugae are written “for all kinds of instruments”: idiomatic passagework for violin is thus entirely absent here, and only emerged as a stylistic trait in the course of the 17th century. Alessandro Scarlatti is the composer of four sonatas that are to be performed senza cembalo, as he specifies, and which are often referred to as the first string quartets. The animated movements are complex counterpoint constructions; the middle movements are tortuous harmonic meanders of great interest. Johann Sebastian Bach’s last cycle of compositions, which remained unfinished, is the Art of Fugue, a masterpiece that crowned a 500-year tradition as well as his own life achievement. The cycle was unquestionably intended for keyboard instruments; nevertheless, already in the 18th century it was likewise played on string instruments. Such performances do not deprive the work of any of its substance, since, in Art of Fugue (as opposed to the fugues in his concertos and sonatas), Bach eschewed any type of idiomatic writing associated with a particular instrument. The quartet sonata by Bach’s pupil Johann Gottlieb Goldberg is one of the finest examples of the undiminished vitality proven by Late Baroque fugue artistry immediately prior to its “demystification”: a firework display of the mind and of the fingers. For unknown reasons, Mozart composed a very complex Fugue in C Minor for two pianos in 1783; then1788, when he was preparing a string quartet arrangement thereof to be published by Hoffmeister, he added an Adagio introduction. Finally, as regards Beethovens Grosse Fuge written in 1826 and initially meant to become the last movement of his Thirteenth string quartet – it was eventually discarded because of the intense difficulty for both listeners and interpreters and became a piece of its own –, are viewer wrote (when the finale was still said fugue): “The critic does not dare to interpret the meaning behind the fugue finale: to him it was incomprehensible, like Chinese… Perhaps, if the master could actually hear his own creations, some passages might have been written differently. We should not condemn this work too prematurely, however: a time may come when that which at first seemed murky and convoluted will be hailed as clear and pleasant in all of its forms.” And he was right, even though the piece remains, even nowadays, a rather complex attention test for any listener. Winning the ARD International Competition in 2012 (also taking the audience prize and six other special prizes) propelled the Armida Quartet on to the international concert platform. Between 2014-16 the Quartet participated on the UK’s BBC New Generation Artists scheme affording them many concerts broadcast across the BBC network including their BBC Proms debut. Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie nominated the Quartet on to the European Concert Hall Organisation Rising Stars-Series during the 2016/2017 season.
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Valentin HAUSSMANN, ComposerLyricist - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Valentin HAUSSMANN, ComposerLyricist - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
ALESSANDRO SCARLATTI, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
ALESSANDRO SCARLATTI, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
ALESSANDRO SCARLATTI, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Ludwig van Beethoven, Composer - Armida Quartett, String Quartet, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer
℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
Presentación del Álbum
Armida Quartet’s “seven-league-boot” journey across the realm of fugue begins with the two earliest published German works in the genre for instrumental ensemble from the year 1602 by baroque German composer Valentin Hausmann (1560-1614). Haussmann’s Fugae are written “for all kinds of instruments”: idiomatic passagework for violin is thus entirely absent here, and only emerged as a stylistic trait in the course of the 17th century. Alessandro Scarlatti is the composer of four sonatas that are to be performed senza cembalo, as he specifies, and which are often referred to as the first string quartets. The animated movements are complex counterpoint constructions; the middle movements are tortuous harmonic meanders of great interest. Johann Sebastian Bach’s last cycle of compositions, which remained unfinished, is the Art of Fugue, a masterpiece that crowned a 500-year tradition as well as his own life achievement. The cycle was unquestionably intended for keyboard instruments; nevertheless, already in the 18th century it was likewise played on string instruments. Such performances do not deprive the work of any of its substance, since, in Art of Fugue (as opposed to the fugues in his concertos and sonatas), Bach eschewed any type of idiomatic writing associated with a particular instrument. The quartet sonata by Bach’s pupil Johann Gottlieb Goldberg is one of the finest examples of the undiminished vitality proven by Late Baroque fugue artistry immediately prior to its “demystification”: a firework display of the mind and of the fingers. For unknown reasons, Mozart composed a very complex Fugue in C Minor for two pianos in 1783; then1788, when he was preparing a string quartet arrangement thereof to be published by Hoffmeister, he added an Adagio introduction. Finally, as regards Beethovens Grosse Fuge written in 1826 and initially meant to become the last movement of his Thirteenth string quartet – it was eventually discarded because of the intense difficulty for both listeners and interpreters and became a piece of its own –, are viewer wrote (when the finale was still said fugue): “The critic does not dare to interpret the meaning behind the fugue finale: to him it was incomprehensible, like Chinese… Perhaps, if the master could actually hear his own creations, some passages might have been written differently. We should not condemn this work too prematurely, however: a time may come when that which at first seemed murky and convoluted will be hailed as clear and pleasant in all of its forms.” And he was right, even though the piece remains, even nowadays, a rather complex attention test for any listener. Winning the ARD International Competition in 2012 (also taking the audience prize and six other special prizes) propelled the Armida Quartet on to the international concert platform. Between 2014-16 the Quartet participated on the UK’s BBC New Generation Artists scheme affording them many concerts broadcast across the BBC network including their BBC Proms debut. Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie nominated the Quartet on to the European Concert Hall Organisation Rising Stars-Series during the 2016/2017 season.
Acerca del álbum
- 1 disco(s) - 15 pista(s)
- Duración total: 00:58:26
- Artistas principales: Armida Quartett
- Compositor: Various Composers
- Sello: Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
- Género Clásica
© 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin ℗ 2017 Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Berlin
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