JSngry Posted Wednesday at 06:39 PM Author Report Posted Wednesday at 06:39 PM The Carter set is only 2 CDs, which allow for extra listens. I normally do two listens to a disc before moving on, but sometimes something get stuck in the head and stays in for a while. This one definitely is sticking, just because there's so much MUSIC in each quartet. So as an adjunct, I downloaded the Walden Quartet's recording of #1, a landmark 1st recording in my opinion, from the Internet Archive and mix it in with my Juilliard listening. Very "helpful" actually, because the Walden recording is in glorious old-school Mono, so the soundstage is VERY flat (and full). This allows for full, almost immediate, discernment of everything that's going on. So when returning to the Juilliard takes, which are totally Modern Digital, the ear is more attuned to the multi-level reality of the music. Probably going to stay on the Carter for the rest of this week. It's certainly not boring music! Quote
JSngry Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM Author Report Posted yesterday at 12:46 AM Ok, I'm not about to claim that the Carter set is anything even remotely like "the only Carter Quartets set you'll ever need" or anything like that. But it's still a good rewarding listen if you can get past the horrid (imo) early-digital sound. The group had a history with Carter, and they worked with him directly on these recordings. So...attention should be paid, imo. Summer With The Juilliard String Quartet will be concluding with the Ergo collection of the Hindemith Quartets. Totally uncharted territory for me, should be fun! Quote
JSngry Posted 13 hours ago Author Report Posted 13 hours ago The Wergo is a 3-CD set that presents the quartets non-sequentially which is not my preference. So I'm ripping and rebuilding to have it my way. Performances seem really frisky, so this is going to be fun!, Quote
JSngry Posted 8 hours ago Author Report Posted 8 hours ago Ok, I still got all of the quartets, in order, on to three CDs (1-2, 3-4, 5-7). Maybe they didn't program it like that because 1 & 2 are sort of "student-y", relatively speaking? I get it, but still... Quote
MomsMobley Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago On 6/11/2025 at 10:30 PM, JSngry said: Virgil Thomson was apparently an important figure at one time. My personal jury is still out on that importance, although I've only heard a few things. This String Quartet is "nice enough"...but the Quartet is in great form. And the last movement does take it up a notch. Plow That Broke The Plains (the film & the score) ** modern recording ** Mother of us All opera ** writer / critic (cranky but not a crank) https://www.loa.org/news-and-views/671-virgil-thomson-the-music-critic-who-managed-to-demystify-an-art-that-was-often-regarded-as-otherworldly/ Quote
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