Composer: Grazyna Bacewicz, Dmitri Shostakovich
Performer: Dudok Quartet
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Rubicon
Catalogue: RCD1099
Release: 2022
Size: 1.06 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
Shostakovich: String Quartet No. 5 in B flat major, Op. 92
01. I. Allegro non troppo
02. II. Andante – Andantino
03. III. Moderato – Allegretto – Andante
Shostakovich: Preludes for piano, Op. 34
04. No. 10 in C-Sharp Minor
05. No. 15 in D-Flat Major
06. No. 14 in F-Sharp Minor
07. No. 5 in D Major
08. No. 16 in B-Flat Minor
09. No. 24 in D Minor
10. No. 17 in A-Flat Major
Bacewicz: String Quartet No. 4
11. I. Andante – Allegro moderato – Allegro energico
12. II. Andante
13. III.
“As a string quartet of the 21st Century, we are searching for the meaning of the music we perform. Our goal is to convey the image which emanates from the music in the most authentic way. As a kind of time-transcending minstrel, the Quartet is continuously searching for the best ways to reflect the music from the past, with a new meaning and for a contemporary audience” – Dudok Quartet, Amsterdam.
In a challenging and thought provoking new album the Dudoks couple two composers who famously masked their true feelings in their music. Shostakovich’s famous ambiguities are present in his 5th quartet of 1951, composed at the same time as the 1st violin concerto and the 10th symphony.
Bacewicz’s 4th quartet, written shortly after the oppression of the Poles in the late 1940s by the Soviet regime, is full of folk music influences (Bacewicz had a keen interest in traditional music which spared her from any aggravation from the Polish puppet regime), and was therefore ‘acceptable’ to the authorities. But she also erects a hall of mirrors around the work to mask her true emotions. Is this happy music? Is it masking something darker? That the composer was a fine violinist is clearly apparent in the 4th quartet which did much to establish her reputation.