Schubert, Franz - String Quartets, Vol. 1 - Diogenes Quartet
Diogenes String Quartet
With over 600 lieder as well as sacred, chamber, orchestral and piano music to his name, Franz Schubert was one of the most prolific and influential composers of his generation -- a man whose music, heavily influenced by the likes of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, drove critics to later argue whether he was of a Viennese Classical or Romantic disposition. Many of Schubert's instrumental works remained unpublished during his lifetime, and it was only in the decades following his untimely death that the young Austrian's genius came to be fully appreciated.
Schubert is perhaps best known as a song composer, and the first volume of this series focuses on the lyrical qualities of his early string quartets. The disc begins with the 1823 'Rosamunde' Quartet No.13 in A minor D804: rooted in the world of song, the work earned its nickname from the slow movement -- a set of variations on a theme from the composer's incidental music to Wilhelmine von Chézy's play Rosamunde (written the year before). Also featured is the Quartet in D D94, which, despite its late numbering, is now believed to be one of Schubert's earliest string creations. Here the dramatic harmonic shifts point to a composer who, even in his teenage years, was already seeking to escape the confines of the Classical period.
Formed in Munich in 1996, the young Diogenes Quartet stands as one of the most acclaimed ensembles of its generation. Here they perform with aplomb, combining freshness of interpretation with technical mastery to create superlative readings that document the beginnings of Schubert's chamber music career.