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Sunday, March 29, 2020

Paul Juon - String Quartets (Sarastro Quartet)


Information

Composer: Paul Juon

CD1:
  • (01) String Quartet No. 1 in D major, Op. 5
  • (06) String Quartet in B minor, Op. 11
CD2:
  • (01) String Quartet No. 2 in A minor, Op. 29
  • (05) String Quartet No. 3 in D minor, Op. 67

Sarastro Quartet
Ralph Orendain, violin
Roman Conrad, violin
Hanna Werner-Helfenstein, viola
Lehel Donath, cello

Date: 2016
Label: cpo
https://www.jpc.de/jpcng/cpo/detail/-/art/paul-juon-saemtliche-streichquartette-vol-1/hnum/4111640

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Review

Paul Juon (1872-1940) enjoyed a brief vogue in Gramophone during the 1930s thanks to a set of the Chamber Symphony (1907) for eight players, which was the last recording made by the National Gramophonic Society label launched by Compton Mackenzie as a complement to the magazine. ‘Though modern,’ remarked Mackenzie, it is ‘not so modern as to make it impossible for simple creatures like myself to follow it.’

Readers were still more enthusiastic in the correspondence columns. ‘My idea of a perfect piece of chamber music,’ wrote one such, and their modern counterparts may echo a diluted version of that sentiment (rather than Mackenzie’s, perhaps) when listening to these spirited and carefully prepared performances of the four quartets. The fruits of Juon’s training with Taneyev are evident throughout in writing that understands each voice of the quartet; so too is a conservatism that turned Stefan Wolpe and Kurt Weill away from Juon and towards his colleague Busoni at the Berlin Hochschule.

The Op 5 Quartet makes the best possible introduction, with a bold five-movement structure enclosing sticky melodies and a pathos-laden Adagio. Op 11 was written earlier and is more heavily reliant on imitative sequences and an effusive, hand-me-down Romantic language. The two later quartets move an inch or two towards their times. Indeed, the first movement of Op 67 gropes its way towards the chromatic labyrinth of Schoenberg’s Op 7 before, perhaps wisely, giving up the effort and retreating back to Taneyev and late Brahms, spiced in the Scherzo and finale by folk-like drones and tunes.

CPO’s booklet material is essential reading: a journal-length essay on composer and works by that indefatigable seeker of musical curios, Eckhardt van den Hoogen, whose intellectual convolutions are dauntlessly translated by Susan Marie Praeder. The Swiss radio recording is close but not too boxy, picking up vestigial sniffs and a broad resonance from the cellist. The Sarastro Quartet play with conviction, as though these unfamiliar works have been well bedded in, just as they did for their previous, no less impressive CPO set of the quartets by another Brahmsian epigone, Felix Weingartner.

-- Peter QuantrillGramophone

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Paul Juon (6 March 1872 – 21 August 1940) was a Russian-born Swiss composer. Juon studied at the Moscow Conservatory with Jan Hřímalý, Anton Arensky and Sergei Taneyev. He also studies at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin with Woldemar Bargiel. During his time in Berlin he was a composition professor, employed by Joseph Joachim. Juon's works include many sonatas, 4 symphonies, 4 string quartets, several piano trios, piano quartets and piano quintets, a sextet, 3 violin concerti, piano works and lieder, as well as a number of stage works. Several of these works have been recorded.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Juon

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The Sarastro Quartet was founded in 1994. Three of its members (violinists and cellist) belong to the Musikkollegium Winterthur, one of Switzerland's most richly traditional and versatile orchestras. The Sarastro Quartet has developed a special affinity for well-known composers of the 19th and 20th centuries. On a tour to Argentina in 2007, the ensemble performed the string quartets of the Argentinian composer Constantino Gaito. The concerts and the recording of those works were enthusiastically received by audiences and critics alike. Other recordings of works by Felix Weingartner and Paul Juon are also highly regarded by critics.
http://www.sarastroquartett.ch/

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2 comments:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Skip Ad' (or 'Get link').
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    CD1 http://raboninco.com/4cZr
    CD2 http://raboninco.com/4cZs

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    CD2 http://exe.io/xOWb07m

    or

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    CD2 http://uii.io/8V1km

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  2. muchas gracias, ronal do, no conocía yo este compositor...

    ReplyDelete