Peteris Vasks: String Quartet No. 4 | Peteris Vasks, Kronos Quartet | A secret door from Baltic Avenue to Boardwalk
classical music:
String Theory, Vol...
The Butter Battle ...
Robert H. Bork
Penguin Classics
Peteris Vasks: Str...
Peteris Vasks: String Quartet No. 4
Peteris Vasks
,
Kronos Quartet
Nonesuch, 2003
average customer review:
based on 10 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
highly recommended
Full title -
Peteris
Vasks
-
String
Quartet
No. 4. Vasks' Fourth String Quartet, composed of five movements, was commissioned for the Kronos Quartet and was premiered in 2000 at the Theatre de la Ville in Paris. A somber reflection on the passing century, it incorporates Latvian folk songs, its movements variously meditative, strident, restless, subdued. Slipcase. Nonesuch. 2003.
Just beautiful
What is greater than purely beautiful, inspired music? Not much. Some think it would be better to combine this piece with the Berg Lyric Suite, putting them on the same CD. That would be better for your wallet, but I don't think it would serve the music as well as separate discs. They are two separate great pieces of music. They are completely different styles. They do not belong on the same CD. Each one is valuable and important on its own and needs no 'filler' to make the CDs worth the money.
for more information click here
A secret door from Baltic Avenue to Boardwalk
Growing up in downtown Winnipeg during the 1950s I was part of hordes of other children, most of them unruly, who had a lot of time on their hands during the long two-month summer holidays which in relative time were actually two centuries long. With the temperature being 95F outside with humidity and squadrons of vicious mosquitoes lurking in the un-mowed grass, the more clever children, like me, spent our time indoors rotting our teeth by consuming chocolate in various forms washed down with uncounted 16 oz. Coca Colas, and playing games like Monopoly. Little did we know that we were being brainwashed into buying into a virulent form of capitalism instead of playing a harmless children's game. The point of all this is that on the Monopoly board the cheapest and most scorned of properties were Mediterranean and Baltic Avenues. Was this fair? I am here to tell you that a lot of the best new classical music is being composed and performed in the Baltic area by Estonian, Latvian and Ukrainian artists. Here is an example. It is
Peteris
Vasks
'
String
Quartet
No. 4 performed by the brilliant and eclectic Kronos Quartet.
This is an amazing work. There are two spiky discordant movements (Toccata I and Toccata II) along with more introspective movements, including the final movement, Meditation, which is one of the most beautiful pieces I have ever heard -strange, nostalgic, and very moving. It takes me to places, other worldly places, better places. Even though I am usually a complaining, cynical, malcontent, fatalistic pseudo-gnostic, listening to the fifth movement (Meditation) somehow gives me hope that all is not lost. Think of it as a message from a better world -one you used to live in and may be able to go back to some day.
for more information click here
Vasks voices compassion at the end of a brutal century
The Kronos
Quartet
continues its devotion to contemporary works by Eastern European composers with this release. Lyrical and elegiac, the 4th
String
Quartet by Latvian composer
Peteris
Vasks
is a meditation on the brutality and suffering of the 20th century. Commissioned for Kronos, it was first performed in May of 2000.
It is a five-movement work of about 30 minutes, and while not highly original, it has excellent models. Vasks declares that the second and fourth movements, Toccata I and Toccata II, are "in a spirit close to that of Shostakovich's style" -- "aggressive, and at times, ironic." This is a notable departure for Vasks, who is not known for anything dissonant or angry. These movements remind me specifically of Shostakovich's famous 8th Quartet, a work full of rage and sorrow dedicated to "the victims of war and fascism," and thought by many to be an indictment of Stalin as well (recorded by Kronos on BLACK ANGELS -- see my review). The first, third and fifth movements (Elegy, Chorale, and Meditation) are in the style that Vasks is known for, influenced by the "holy minimalism" of Part and Gorecki, with Latvian folksong motifs and romantic gestures that some might find to be overly ripe. He utilizes glissandos, seemingly representing movements up and down between the Earth to Heaven, which echo the powerful works of Sofia Gubaidulina. And Vasks draws on yet another influence -- the climax of the central Chorale parallels the well-known climax of Barber's "Adagio." The closing Meditation, the longest movement at 11:35, features a long, lovely solo for David Harrington's violin. This passage beautifully expresses the feeling of COMPASSION.
Vasks says of his 4th Quartet, "[t]here has been so much bloodshed and destruction, and yet love's power and idealism have helped keep the world in balance." Utilizing the recognizable works by Barber and Shostakovich, both emotionally direct and powerful works, couldn't make more sense. Vasks may not be the most original of contemporary composers, but he knows how to work with existing materials and create music that is accessible and moving.
for more information click here
A Very Good, Albeit Unorignal, Quartet
Vasks
' Fourth
String
Quartet
is much like Shostakovich's Eight String Quartet, except not. Whereas Shostakovich's quartet is overwhelming, brooding, and relentless, Vasks' work is far more reserved. Tension is just beneath the surface.
Shostakovich's opus ends in defeat. The finale is an example of just how haunting music can be. The finale to Vasks' Fourth Quartet is again another example of how haunting music can be- but this time, in another way. The pensive finale, with its violin solo, reflects upon all the injustice wrought last century.
for more information click here
Bravo,
What a great
string
quartet
. I sat transfixed by
Vasks
writing. How wonderful the music develops, hints of Latvian floksongs inform much of the quieter movements and when the crunchy, disonant Toccata's 1 & 2 arrive, the listner is ready for it. The ending is marvelous bit of composition in which the violins perform a morendo as the gliss (sorry, I play trombone and this is the best I can do to describe it) upward into silence....I will be purchasing the violin concerto and other string quartets of Vasks as the editorial review suggests. This is wonderful 20th century music.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
Tracks
String Quartet No. 4: I. Elegy | String Quartet No. 4: II. Toccata I | String Quartet No. 4: III. Chorale | String Quartet No. 4: IV. Toccata II | String Quartet No. 4: V. Meditation
products you might be interested in
recommendations
Late 20th/21st Century Eastern European Composers
20/21st century chamber music for Bryan
THE KRONOS QUARTET: A Listener's Guide
Just music...not to be missed.
Modern String Quartets..
quartet
Art of Segovia
Debussy for Daydreaming
The Essential Yo-Yo Ma
Build Your Baby's Brain
The Most Relaxing Classical Music in the Universe
vasks
Peteris Vasks: Symphony No. 2; Violin Concerto "Distant Light"
Northern Lights: Music of Contemplation for a New Age
Music of Peteris Vasks
While You Are Alive
Vasks: Message
search for classical music
string quartet
,
peteris
,
quartet
,
string
,
vasks
toavi.com
web
randomly chosen
book:
Tapas Antipasto Mezze: Tapas, Antipasto, Mezze ("Australian Women's ...