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Name: Bruce Cropper
E-mail:
Date: Sunday, July 29, 2001 at 07:41:04
Text: There appear to be at lest two other beings who appreciate
the utterly sublime beauty of Scubert's C major String Quintet.
My first awareness of the work came many years ago when I saw a
biographic film of Artur Rubinstein. AR said the quintet was his
all time favourite piece of music. As he was a pianist, I sat up
and took some notice. Soon after I acquired a copy of the Weller
Quartet's performance on vinyl and fell in love with the piece. The
love affair has lasted around 30 years and will never die while I
live (and who knows after that?). The piece has remained my own
favourite.
I also agree that the Unfinished is the other work which plumbs
the depths and ascends the height of human emotion.
Great as Beethoven is (and I enjoy so much of his music) only a
few pieces approach (for me) the depth of the quintet: Cavatina (op
130); slow movement of opus 135; and slow movement of Archduke
Piano Trio.
Name: Hoshang Dastoor
E-mail:
Date: Thursday, March 29, 2001 at 13:24:40
Text: Schubert String Quintet is one of the noblest and most
elevated examples of pure and direct communication with the Divine
through the medium of instrumental music. One of the great
tragedies of music was Schubert's most untimely passing at the age
of 31. And yet an intimate experince of the Quintet tends to draw
us inexorably to the conclusion that, having created this
masterpiece, he realised the greatest heights, and we wonder
whether he could ever have surpassed himself had he lived a normal
life span. Through the tragedy, then, we rejoice because here is a
soul who has travelled very far indeed on his chosen spiritual
path. One of the distinguishing features of Schubert's greatest
music is the tremendous power of its expression. This is seen in
his String Quartet No. 15 in G Major and also in the "Great" C
Major Symphony. But it is in the Quintet that this power is at its
most all-embracing and versatile. Here, Schubert takes you into
regions of intense concentration, where there is a still centre
that nothing can ever disturb or agitate. The first such oasis is
the second subject of the first movement, where you are carried in
a gently meandering stream. There is a deep pulse here, subtle and
ever-present, and a sense of quietly determined movement. And you
wonder, as always with the quintessential late Schubert, how
beautiful his tunes are and how difficult it is at the same time to
grasp their true inner meaning. One is soon immersed in that
incomparable miracle of inspiration, the second movement, where you
are suspended in an intense, dimensionless region, at once
bottomlessly profound and unsurpassably lofty, and are utterly
quieted in that trance-like meditation. This music cannot be
described in ordinary terms - it suffuses the human organism
wholly, and cleanses the spirit with infinite wisdom and gentlenes
and love. Having said that, we find ourselves plunged into that
stormy middle section - only to find to our vastest surprise that
the agitation is but another side, a complementary aspect, as it
were, to the initial, quietly meditative impulse of this movement.
This section is introspective throughout the gamut of its hard
struggles; its laboured breathing is worship, and we are climbing
up a jagged mountain, returning to peace only after falling many
times. And what a return it is! How is Schubert going to make it,
we ask ourselves. And yet, the reprise of the opening is a pure
miracle - the sense of moving from darkness to light. And even when
out of that dim and troublous tunnel, we cannot forget our
agitation easily. Schubert lets us come out of it gradually, on our
own terms, as if he knows that any more abrupt transition would be
shattering to our psyches. Nearing the end of the second movement
is that celebrated timeless point where there is an attempt to
re-enter that grim tunnel (we wonder why, in the first place), and
we hover at the brink in a state of almost unbearable suspense,
before we are finally led towards wonderflly calm resolution as the
all-pervading tranquility of the final bars descends upon us. We
sonder whether Schubert will ever be able to recapture this state
of being, especially after the tumultous and strident opening of
the third movement. However, the trio does have a surprise in store
- it is deeply mysterious and still, and we are led into yet
another brief journey of the spirit. The greatest musical works are
those that incorporate many diverse levels of intellectual and
spiritual experience, and balance all of these so as to envelope
and enrich our whole being. Such creations are indeed rare and the
C Major Quintet is a supreme example.
Name: Charles Han
E-mail:
Date: Wednesday, September 1, 1999 at 23:50:23
Text: Here is a fine excerpt on this piece, taken from CD liner
notes by Martin Chusid:
"There is only one instrumental work by Schubert other than [this] Quintet
which has consistently received comparable appreciation: the
'Unfinished' Symphony. In both compositions an opening Allegro
movement combines melodies of astonishing beauty with moments of
great power. In each, a sublime slow movement follows, in which an
almost ethereal serenity gives way to passionate outbursts. These
outbursts, in turn, serve to emphasize the prevailing, almost
magical, tone in the remainder of the movement.
"For the lover of chamber music, Schubert's String Quintet
emerges as one of the purest, one of the most ideal expressions of
mankind's rich and varied emotional world. Musician and amateur
alike seem to agree that art has never been more successfully
wedded with musical technique than in this completely satisfying
composition."
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