Tracklist:
CD 1:
String Quartet No.1 Op.7
01 Lento
02 Allegretto
03 Introduzione (allegro) – allegro vivace
String Quartet No.2 Op.17
04 Moderato
05 Allegro
06 Lento
String Quartet No.4
07 Allegro
09 Prestissimo con sordino
10 Allegretto
11 Allegro molto
CD 2:
String Quartet No.3
01 Prima parte: moderato
02 Seconda parte: allegro
03 Ricapitulazione della prima parte: moderate-allegro molto
String Quartet No.5
04 Allegro
05 Adagioo molto
06 Scherzo, alla Bulgarese
07 Andante
08 Finale, allegro vivace 7
String Quartet No.6
09 Mesto, vivace
10 Mesto, Marcia
11 Mesto, Burletta
12 Mesto
AllMusic Review by Blair Sanderson
Béla Bartók’s String Quartets (6) are not only touchstones of modern composition — along with Shostakovich’s 15, the greatest string quartets written since Beethoven’s late masterpieces, and essential listening — but they are also the acid test for any virtuoso quartet to prove its technical skills, expressive powers, and physical stamina. Since the Rubin Quartet’s 2004 set faces fierce competition from many excellent recordings, notably those by the Takács, Emerson, and Juilliard Quartets, one needs an aesthetic yardstick to make a fair assessment. The Rubin’s transparent tone quality, balanced ensemble, and poised expression in the youthful String Quartets No. 1 and No. 2 may remind listeners of the Juilliard’s best recording (that of 1963 on Columbia), and the group’s muscularity and objective clarity in the mature String Quartets Nos. 3, No. 4, and No. 5 may be compared favorably to the Emerson’s strong and lucid cycle on Deutsche Grammophon. Yet the Rubin Quartet does not ignite the fires evident everywhere in the great Takács recording on London, and does not penetrate to the depths of grief that the ensemble achieves, particularly in the desolate Lento of No. 2 or in the Mesto ritornelli of the String Quartet No. 6. So this is a fine set for those of cooler temperament, though not the place to find real passion and intensity. Brilliant’s sound is exceptional.