Calidore String Quartet tells the story of Beethoven by starting from the end

Published: Feb. 22, 2023, 8 a.m.

Calidore String Quartet \u2014 Beethoven: The Late Quartets (Signum Classics)





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New Classical Tracks - Calidore Quartet


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Sometimes the best way to tell a story is to start at the end. That way your destination is clear. That\u2019s what the Calidore String Quartet decided to do when recording all of Beethoven\u2019s String Quartets during the pandemic and recently releasing their first 3-CD set, Beethoven: The Late Quartets.


Cellist Estelle Choi said about the creation of the project, \u201cIt will be an interesting journey to go back and realize how much uniqueness and creativity was involved in every single one of his quartets. Each one is completely different from the other.\u201d


Why are these string quartets significant to you?


\u201cThe Beethoven String Quartets span his entire career. You get work from every single period of his life. The importance of these works is immeasurable. It ushered in a completely new era and cemented the roots of the string quartet as a vehicle, not just for looking into the past but also looking far into the future.


\u201cSuppose you're coming into this not knowing anything about the string quartets. In that case, it represents an incredible body of work from somebody who pushed his creativity and did not feel constrained to fit the status quo. You can explore his compositional eras and find something that speaks to you because his music expresses the human condition.\u201d


How do these late quartets unite us as people?


\u201cIn his struggles, you see how he made himself heard within the music. One particular piece which hits me personally is Opus. 132, Heiliger Dankgesang. This is Beethoven struggling to come to terms with knowing that he's towards the end of his life. But in the slow movement, he takes a moment to give thanks.


\u201cA visceral moment in learning this piece that stays with me forever is when we worked with the first violinist from the Alben Berg Quartet, G\xfcnter Pichler. He was describing this movement as going from this gorgeous chorale-like opening into the next section which is renewed force.


\u201cHe described it as imagining somebody who had been belabored with sickness, suddenly being able to stand up and walk as a healthy individual. That has always stayed with me in imagining Beethoven feeling the burden of this illness and yet being able to stand up and say, \u2018No, there is something to live for.\u2019\u201d





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Resources

Calidore String Quartet \u2014 Beethoven: The Late Quartets (Signum Classics)


Calidore String Quartet (official site)