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Prokofiev: String Quartets Nos. 1 and 2; Sonata for 2 Violins

Home > Complete List of "t-u" Artists > TG 4 > Item 14
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Prokofiev: String Quartets Nos. 1 and 2; Sonata for 2 Violins
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by David Finckel, Sergey Prokofiev, Emerson String Quartet, Lawrence Dutton, and Eugene Drucker

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$16.98
At Amazon on 9-21-2008.

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The twentieth century in Western music did not know quite what to do with Prokofiev, and so, it largely ignored him. Yet, it is clear that he was one of the century's pre-eminent composers, a master, and to ignore him ultimately reflects worse on those who overlooked him. Like Sibelius, Prokofiev both drew great draughts from the well of Tradition, and yet clearly spoke with his own voice. The gigantic stature of these two composers, together, is not quite convenient to the `musical progressivists,' who would maintain (a little naively, and quite inartistically) that greatness in Art is contingent upon some notion of "progress." Prokofiev had the further disadvantage of following Stravinsky's astonishingly strong lead; he essentially followed Stravinsky to Paris, trying similarly to make his name via Dyagilev's Saisons russes. But (among other factors) a string of misfirings with Dyagilev's company, and that small matter of Prokofiev having a musical personality of his own (rather than being a clone of Stravinsky who, all question of his undeniable greatness aside, could practically do no wrong so far as the French were concerned), made Prokofiev's going slow, as he sought to establish himself outside of Russia. Prokofiev was not Schoenberg or Bartók, either; and these two well-wrought string quartets have unfairly been given short shrift for their obvious dissimilarity against the monumental output of the Austrian and the Hungarian in the medium of the string quartet. (The tone of Prokofiev's work is perfectly distinct from Bartók's, even where the former uses folk materials, as in the second quartet.) But, as with Prokofiev's marvelous pair of Violin Sonatas, these two quartets are masterfully constructed, brilliantly conceived for the instruments and ensemble - in short, they are perfect musical statements, and everything that Prokofiev had to say musically, he said with grace and charm, whether writing for the symphony orchestra, or for piano solo, or for any chamber combination in between. The Sonata for two violins is a lovely bonus on this disc. The astonishing thing about this piece is how Prokofiev manages, with only two musicians, to conjure echoes of some of the textures in his orchestral works, especially in the opening Andante cantabile; the musical fabric is beguilingly rich for a mere duet. The third movement. Commodo (quasi allegretto) is signature Prokofiev, tender nostalgia sometimes tinctured with desolation. This is a minor work, with a big spirit.
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Prokofiev: String Quartets Nos. 1 and 2; Sonata for 2 Violins
Available from Amazon
Price: $16.98
Updated on 9-21-2008.

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