This release by Toronto's Cecilia String Quartet is part of a general reevaluation of Felix Mendelssohn's music, one that seeks to strip away Victorian accretions of fragile neurasthenia and give the music a more Beethovenian mood. The argument works well in respect to the pair of Op. 44 string quartets, among Mendelssohn's most compact and intense works, and the Cecilia players put it strongly here. You will certainly sit up and take notice at the brilliant, slashing opening of the String Quartet in D major, Op. 44, No. 1, ...
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This release by Toronto's Cecilia String Quartet is part of a general reevaluation of Felix Mendelssohn's music, one that seeks to strip away Victorian accretions of fragile neurasthenia and give the music a more Beethovenian mood. The argument works well in respect to the pair of Op. 44 string quartets, among Mendelssohn's most compact and intense works, and the Cecilia players put it strongly here. You will certainly sit up and take notice at the brilliant, slashing opening of the String Quartet in D major, Op. 44, No. 1, and the energy level remains high through the minuet (a scherzo in the second quartet) and the not-very-slow slow movements. The finales have an almost symphonic energy. Really the high point is the opening movement of the String Quartet in E minor, Op. 44, No. 2, where the Cecilia keeps up with the contrapuntal density that really does approach that of Beethoven's String Quartet in E minor, Op. 59, No. 2; here the quartet plays passionately and really do seem to find a layer of...
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