Artist: Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective Title: Brahms & Contemporaries Vol. 2 Year Of Release: 2025 Label: Chandos Genre: Classical Quality: FLAC 24bit-96kHz (tracks + booklet) Total Time: 59:08 Total Size: 997 MB
Tracklist:
- Héritte-Viardot: Quartet No. 1 in A Major, Op. 9 "Im Sommer": I. Des Morgens, im Walde (Morning, in the Woods) (7:23)
- Héritte-Viardot: Quartet No. 1 in A Major, Op. 9 "Im Sommer": II. Fliegen und Schmetterlinge (Flies and Butterflies) (5:46)
- Héritte-Viardot: Quartet No. 1 in A Major, Op. 9 "Im Sommer": III. Die Schwüle (Sultriness) (6:14)
- Héritte-Viardot: Quartet No. 1 in A Major, Op. 9 "Im Sommer": IV. Abends, unter der Eiche (Bauerntanz) (Evening, under the Oak-tree [Peasant Dance]) (4:35)
- Brahms: Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60: I. Allegro non troppo (11:00)
- Brahms: Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60: II. Scherzo (4:11)
- Brahms: Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60: III. Andante (8:35)
- Brahms: Quartet No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 60: IV. Finale (11:26)
Brahms’s Third Piano Quartet gestated for a long time – the first sketches were made in 1855, whilst the work was not completed until 1875.
Numerous commentators tie the work to Brahms’s infatuation with Clara Schumann, who certainly heard many of the various iterations of the piece before its final version. But Brahms did not write programme music, and whatever his motivations may or may not have been, the result is, like the rest of his output, pure music.
Louise Héritte-Viardot was a French singer, pianist, conductor, and composer. She was born in Paris, the eldest child of Pauline Viardot-Garcia and Louis Viardot, and sister to the violinist and conductor Paul Viardot. Her singing career was cut short by illness, but with the help of Clara Schumann she found a second career as a singing teacher at the Hoch Conservatory, in Frankfurt.
In contrast to Brahms’s quartet, Viardot’s work is extremely programmatic. Titled Im Sommer (In Summer), it comprises four movements which also carry evocative titles: ‘Morning, in the Woods’, ‘Flies and Butterflies’, ‘Sultriness’, and ‘Evening, under the Oak-tree’