Shostakovich: The String Quartets
Shostakovich: The String Quartets

Shostakovich: The String Quartets

Manufacturer:
London/Decca

UPC:
028945577623

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$47.98

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Product Specifications
Product NameShostakovich: The String Quartets
ManufacturerLondon/Decca
Product Number MPN028945577623
Retail Price $47.98
EAN-130028945577623
EAN-1400028945577623
UPC028945577623
Specifications 
Release Date1998-02-10
FormatAudio CD, CD
Artist(s)Dmitry Shostakovich
AlbumShostakovich: The String Quartets, Shostakovich: The String Quartets / Fitzwilliam Quartet
Tracks
  1. String Quartet No. 1 In C Major, Op.49: I. Moderato - D. Shostakovich
  2. String Quartet No. 1 In C Major, Op.49: II. Moderato - D. Shostakovich
  3. String Quartet No. 1 In C Major, Op.49: III. Allegro molto - D. Shostakovich
  4. String Quartet No. 1 In C Major, Op.49: IV. Allegro - D. Shostakovich
  5. String Quartet No. 2 In A Major, Op.68: I. Overture. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
  6. String Quartet No. 2 In A Major, Op.68: II. Recitative & Romance. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
  7. String Quartet No. 2 In A Major, Op.68: III. Valse. Allegro - D. Shostakovich
  8. String Quartet No. 2 In A Major, Op.68: IV. Theme And Variations - D. Shostakovich
  9. String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  10. String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: II. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
  11. String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: III. Allegro non troppo - D. Shostakovich
  12. String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: IV. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
  13. String Quartet No. 3 In F Major, Op. 73: V. Moderato - Adagio - D. Shostakovich
  14. String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  15. String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: II. Andantino - D. Shostakovich
  16. String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  17. String Quartet No. 4 In D Major, Op. 83: IV. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  18. String Quartet No .5 In B flat Major, Op. 92: I. Allegro non troppo - D. Shostakovich
  19. String Quartet No. 5 In B Flat Major, Op. 92: II. Andante - D. Shostakovich
  20. String Quartet No. 5 In B Flat Major, Op. 92: III. Moderato - Allegretto - Andante - D. Shostakovich
  21. String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  22. String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: II. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
  23. String Quartet No. 6 In G Major, Op. 101: III. Lento - D. Shostakovich
  24. String Quartet No.6 in G Major, Op. 101: IV. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  25. String Quartet No. 7 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: I. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  26. String Quartet No. 7 zIn F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: II. Lento - D. Shostakovich
  27. String Quartet No. 7 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 108: III. Allegro - Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  28. String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: I. Largo - D. Shostakovich
  29. String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: II. Allegro molto - D. Shostakovich
  30. String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  31. String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: IV. Largo - D. Shostakovich
  32. String Quartet No. 8 In C Minor, Op. 110: V. Largo - D. Shostakovich
  33. String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: I. Moderato con moto - D. Shostakovich
  34. String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: II. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
  35. String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: III. Allegretto - D. Shostakovich
  36. String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: IV. Adagio - D. Shostakovich
  37. String Quartet No. 9 In E Flat Major, Op. 117: V. Allegro - D. Shostakovich
  38. String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: I. Andante - D. Shostakovich
  39. String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: II. Allegretto furioso - D. Shostakovich
  40. String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: III. Adagio - - D. Shostakovich
  41. String Quartet No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 118: IV. Allegretto - Andante - D. Shostakovich
  42. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: I. Introduction: Andantino - Dmitri Shostakovich
  43. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: II. Scherzo: Allegretto - Dmitri Shostakovich
  44. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: III. Recitative: Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  45. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: IV. Etude: Allegro - Dmitri Shostakovich
  46. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: V. Humoresque: Allegro - Dmitri Shostakovich
  47. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: VI. Elegy: Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  48. String Quartet No. 11 In F Minor, Op. 122: I. Finale: Moderato - Dmitri Shostakovich
  49. String Quartet No. 12 In D Flat Major, Op. 133: II. Moderato - Allegreto - Dmitri Shostakovich
  50. Allegretto - Adagio - Moderato - Allegreto - Dmitri Shostakovich
  51. String Quartet No. 13 In B Flat Minor, Op. 138: Adagio - Doppio movimento - Tempo primo - Dmitri Shostakovich
  52. String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: I. Allegretto - Dmitri Shostakovich
  53. String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: II. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  54. String Quartet No. 14 In F Major, Op. 142: III. Allegretto - Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  55. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: I. Elegy. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  56. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: II. Serenade. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  57. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: III. Intermezzo. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  58. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: IV. Nocturne. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
  59. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: V. Funeral March. Adagio molto - Dmitri Shostakovich
  60. String Quartet No. 15 E-Flat Minor, Op. 144: VI. Epilogue. Adagio - Dmitri Shostakovich
Num. of Items6
Record LabelDecca, Polygram Records, London/Decca
GenreQuartet
SubgenreQuartets
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Reviews
5 Star Rating  "Opportunity Waits for No Hominid! Do it! Buy!"2008-05-22
- Reviewed By sidereusnuntius
Shostakovich's string quartets are as much the supreme masterworks of 20th Century music as Beethoven's were of the classical period. I hardly dare say more about them; they are profound on every level, and like Beethoven's, they grow more profound with every listening.

Shostakovich, in a sense, discovered the Fitzwilliam String Quartet when its members were undergrads at Cambridge. He entrusted the first western performances of his last three quartets to them for premiere, and they in turn made the first western recording of his full quartet cycle.

Many full cycles have been recorded since, and people have different favorites. I have three sets; this one by the Fitzwilliams is my own choice for the most insightful and incisive. But here's the important part of this review. Although $46.00 more or less is the standard price, I've just happened to notice that there are several sets available used for less than $10.00! Some used-CD dealer in Outer Slobbovia is gonna say a prayer on my behalf tonight!
 
3 Star Rating  "So-so"2007-09-28
- Reviewed By hartjoe2
The first ones are warm and human (as much so as anything written since the 19th century ever gets except Rachmaninov). But as they progress, they become more dissonant and strident and unpleasant. Well-performed. I suppose all editions of them are. I doubt I'll listen to them much. But I'll haul them out occasionally and listen until I can't take it any more. The price was right. A bargain.
 
4 Star Rating  "Hum a little Shostakovich"2007-02-19
- Reviewed By User: A3KXQJ9N1JY0WB
I enjoyed these performances and would have purchased this album, but there is a persistent hum on some of these CDs and, once noticed, it became impossible for me not to notice it.
 
5 Star Rating  "Not just a bargain--a must-have"2007-02-05
- Reviewed By User: A1E6TQ1JMYK1TL
There are perhaps several complete Shostakovich cycles one would like to own for these amazing pieces, and this is one of them. Not every single quartet is perfect, but that is to be expected. What these players excel in is an emotional depth that is perhaps left behind in the sheer brilliance of the Emerson SQ's playing.

Their tempi are excellent: fast when necessary, and painfully slow where Shostakovich asks for it. Perhaps my favorite point of their playing is the articulation, which is broader than most recordings I hear. Typically, they only play short when asked to in the score, and I think this sounds better than, for instance, if the opening of the Fifth Quartet, a work of enormous gravity and passion, is taken lightly.

Get this one. Highly recommended.
 
3 Star Rating  "lusterless"2006-11-04
- Reviewed By User: A1E6AUEEWD1BUR
The only qualm I have with this set is that the String Quartet No. 9 is a lusterless endeavor when compared to other renditions. The intensity and suffering just isnt there.
 
4 Star Rating  "Rating this bargain set against the Emersons at full price"2006-03-09
- Reviewed By huntleysf
For many buyers the choice for a complete cycle of the Shostakovich quartets will come down to three: the Borodin, Emerson, and Fitzwilliam quartets. I own the latter two and can offer a comparison.

Fitzwilliam: This set, made between 1975-77 in a church in Surrey, has the advantage of price. Although the 15 quartets are spread out over 6 CDs as compared to 5 for the Emersons, Decca offers this cycle at roughly half the cost of the DG cycle (it's much cheaper than that, even, on the used market). The performances eschew Russian soul, grit, and emotional extremes such as one hears from the Borodin Quartet. The Fitzwilliam Quartet sounds soulful but stops short of impassioned. As much as it is possible, they make this music friendly and easy to listen to without sacrificing all of its bite and sarcasm. They are not a virtuoso group (English critics actually praise them for this lack, as if the Emersons' technical mastery was a sign of glibness), so individual solo lines, of which there are many in these quartets, sound medium well played, not dazzling. Decca's sound as transferred to CD can be a bit shrill and congested but is certainly good enough. One large missing ingredient is tonal variation--the Fitzwilliam doesn't search out the peculiar tonalities that are implied in Shostakovich's string writing, which can be eerie, ghostly, brutal, and caustic by turns.

Emerson: Recorded in Aspen at intervals between 1994 and 1999, these are live performances from the music festival and are thus not ideal sonically. What's most lacking is solidity and body. Even so, the recorded sound is considerably more detailed than in the Fitzwilliam set, or any other of the four I listened to. When this cycle was first issued in 1999 it swept the field for good reason. The Emersons are head and shoulders above any other quartet for sheer virtuosity in this music. Not that virtuosity is required very often, but the many solo lines are rendered with exquisite technique, and the Emersons pay very close attention to changes in tonality. As a result, these performances are more varied and interesting to listen to than any competitor that I sampled (including the Fitzwilliam, Brodsky, Borodin, St. Petersburg, and Shostakovich quartets on various labels).

The drawbacks are price (it's hard to find even a used set for under $70) and the prevalent accusation, from some quarters, that the Emersons lack Russian soul--they are supposedly too cool, detached, and efficient. Yet this charge can be turned around to say that the Emersons make Shostakovich sound more modern by removing a layer of sentiment. It's really up to the listener to decide, yet I found that cool detachment is not prevalent here--not by any means--and the reviewer below who thinks that the tempos are uniformly too fast is not aware of the field; the Emersons are not extreme in their allegros, at least not very often, and when they play a movement for virtuosic speed, it's almost alwaays to good effect.

I bbught this set because I heard the Emersons play Shostakovich in concert on two occasions, and I was deeply struck by how much better these quartets sound when they are given superlative musicianship. I am not one to believe that Shostakovich was a great master of quartet writing compared to Bartok, Schoenberg, and Janacek among moderns. But he found an idiom, often spare and therefore one-dimenisonal, that is easy to absorb. The Emersons go a step further and give that spare idiom all kinds of shading and colors that often make it sound better than it is.

In sum, I did what many collectors befoe me have done. I gave away the Fitzwilliam set, which was a good stop gap for many years, and relish the Emerson set as a great achievement, especially for a non-Russian ensemble.
 
5 Star Rating  "A triumph of creativity over censorship"2006-01-22
- Reviewed By gilbertocamara
It is extremely difficult for a westerner, living in today's modern democracies, to have the full grasp of the extent of censorship and control of the Stalinist regime. During most of his creative life, Shostakovich was under surveillance, and some of his works were publicly censored by the self-intitled followers of the "Socialist Realism". The tension of censorship is reflected in his body of symphonies. The uneveness and limitations of some of his symphonies are a reflection of his limitations under Stalin. His string quartets, however, are mostly free from these limitations. For one, it is extremely difficult to establish what is "socialist realism" in a string quartet. Since Shostakovich was not a follower of serialism, he could afford to translate into the string quartet medium most of his tortured inner self. These quartets are filled with humanism. They are not easy listening in the sense of Hadyn and Mozart. They are rather deep, touching pieces, like the late Beethoven, Schummann, or Bartok. These recordings by the Fitzwilliam Quartet have an immense authority at a reasonable price. Lovers of string quartet cannot afford to be without the entire Shostakovich set, and anynone buying this collection will enjoy a lifetime of rewarding listening.
 
5 Star Rating  "Shostakovich evolution"2005-09-29
- Reviewed By ospidillo
I was more than a little pleased that my local public library acquired this wonderful CD set. While I tend to lean towards listening to full orchestras and symphonies, I must comment that this quartet has performed these compositions in such a tight but well-balanced manner that I was inspired to listen to the works over and over.

Possibly the most significant facet of this set is that it provided me with a wonderful documentation of the clear musical growth of Dmitri Shostakovich over a period of years, albeit the very earliest of these compositions was spectacular.

For the newbie to classical music, this CD set is a good acquisition although I would acquire Shostakovich's 5th, 9th and possibly the 13th Symphonies first. Also, if you like to play classical CDs as wallpaper while you read, this is the set for you!
 
5 Star Rating  "A Fantastic Set"2005-03-03
- Reviewed By gaiusulpius
I considered buying the complete String Quartets of Shostakovich for some time, unable to decide if the Emerson or Borodin (minus the 14th and 15th) would be the one I wanted. The playing of the Emerson was certainly in their favor but I settled on the Fitzwilliam String Quartet after reading a review of this set. The Fitzwilliam may not play as well as the Emerson or have the Russian advantage of the Borodin but they have captured the emotion behind the music as no other quartet. The Fitzwilliam also worked with Shostakovich and were given the honor of the Western premiere of the 15th Quartet, so there is an element of authority to their playing. Throughout the set, I was impressed with the playing and depths of feeling expressed.

The quartets appear in composition order on the 6 discs allowing the listener to follow how Shostakovich developed the form. Each CD is in a paper envelop inside a box. The accompanying booklet described each quartet and provides insight into their composition. The recordings are clear and nicely balanced, perhaps not as refined as the sound of the Emerson but certainly excellent. I knew only three of the quartets well before I got this set, and I recommend taking the plunge and buying all of the quartets if possible. In sum, this is a rewarding complete set that will be of interest to the listener who wants to follow Shostakovich's development of the string quartet.

 
5 Star Rating  "affordable and good."2004-02-09
- Reviewed By jeremiah_lawson
With the Borodin cycles and the Emerson cycle out on CD this very good set tends to get overlooked. There are a lot of things I like about this set better than either the Borodin or Emerson set.

I prefer this set to the Borodin set because the engineering is more satisfying. You get a more intimate sound with this set. For those who are curious, the other selling point is that Fitzwilliam gave the Western premiere of the Fifteenth quartet and were one of the last groups to work with the composer before his death. And while the sound isn't as crisp as what you'll find on the Emerson set I prefer their handling of the large-scale structure and emotional content of the 3rd and 7th quartets (not that this is anything other than personal preference).

But the most pragmatic reason was price. I got this set when I could only afford one and this was the only one I could afford. Only after listening to it a lot and researching the history of the quartet did I learn they had worked with the composer. If you can only afford one box set of Shostakovich and have a tight budget this is the one you want.

 
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