Opening Concert: Schubert, Death and the Maiden - Belcea Quartet - 30.09.21

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2021
  • Belcea Quartet
    Corina Belcea, violin
    Axel Schacher, violin
    Krzysztof Chorzelski, viola
    Antoine Lederlin, cello
    F. Schubert: String Quartet No. 14, in D minor, D. 810, “Death & the Maiden”
    I. Allegro
    II. Andante con moto
    III. Scherzo. Allegro molto - Trio
    IV. Presto - Prestissimo
    Live-streamed on September 30, 2021 at the Music Chapel
    MuCH Digital Concerts 2021
    MuCH Music Season 2021-2022
    More info: www.musicchapel.org
    We would like to thank:
    Our structural sponsors - ING, Proximus and Ginion Group.
    Our institutional partners - the « Loterie Nationale / Nationale Loterij » and the « Banque Nationale de Belgique / Nationale Bank van België ».
    The Foundations - Baillet Latour Fund, Foundation Futur21, King Baudouin Foundation, Foundation Engie, Guttman collection -, the corporate partners, all the Maecenas and those who prefer to remain anonymous.
    Thank you also to our public support - the « Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles », Belspo, the « Province du Brabant Wallon », the « Commune de Waterloo ».
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 43

  • @tomboyer5608
    @tomboyer5608 2 года назад +27

    Just saw them do this in Philadelphia -- incredible! They are all amazing but Corina Belcea is .... well, probably the greatest string quartet violinist in the world. Such a powerful player but also so refined and so sensitive.

    • @judyclark1906
      @judyclark1906 2 года назад +1

      Yes, je suis d'accords. They are excellent, and their passion is for the music intended by the composer, which proves one's life 'on this mortal coil' can inspire Eternal joy and creativity as long as our human species chooses to extend our existence for future generations, and not incinerate our nations via conflict with nuclear weapons. Nuclear power generation is NOT a threat to our future, but nuclear weapons certainly are!
      Music 🎶 is our Immortal gift to generations to come! I think Schubert would be quite pleased with this rendering, don't you.

    • @tomboyer5608
      @tomboyer5608 Год назад

      @@judyclark1906 Yes Schubert would be amazed. The work never got a decent performance in his lifetime. The Schuppanzigh quartet, the best in Vienna at the time, a group who had worked with Beethoven, gave it a private reading but Ignaz Schuppanzigh, a fine violinist, couldn't handle the technical challenges and told Schubert to give up on chamber music and go back to writing songs.
      Fortunately it was found in Schubert's papers and published after his death, and today it it is considered among the great masterpieces of 19th century chamber music and one of the great achievements of German romanticism.

  • @iaf4454
    @iaf4454 Год назад +9

    This is how four people are connected .. four brains four bodies and four hearts while playing together.. so hard and wonderful 💜

  • @Ian24s
    @Ian24s 2 года назад +25

    I. Allegro 2:00
    II. Andante con moto 14:20
    III. Scherzo. Allegro molto - Trio 30:34
    IV. Presto - Prestissimo 35:00

  • @knd1940
    @knd1940 2 года назад +11

    An outstanding performance. They have equally outstanding performances of all the Beethoven quartets (including both versions of Op. 130) on RUclips. I'm surprised they haven't been more widely watched.

  • @irabraus9478
    @irabraus9478 Год назад +10

    To my ears, this quartet comes closest of any quartet today in marrying ensemble and soloistic playing.

  • @GermanCarretie
    @GermanCarretie 2 года назад +5

    Genial...!!! El trabajo de Corina Belcea, Axel Schacher, Krzysztof Chorzelski y Antoine Lederlin.. Maravillo. Si, es cierto que la obra de Schubert lo pone fácil por lo hermosa que es. Pero ellos la elevan aun más. Gracias y Felicidades.

  •  2 года назад +5

    Great! We are excited about your performance!

  • @cappycapuzi1716
    @cappycapuzi1716 Год назад +3

    what a masterpiece! Hypnotic

  • @amirnasseri
    @amirnasseri Год назад +3

    The adds are brutal!!

  • @vioolstudiodiana4782
    @vioolstudiodiana4782 2 года назад +4

    Absolutely beautiful

  • @staffanolofsson8201
    @staffanolofsson8201 4 месяца назад

    Dynamic and responsive playing from Belcea Quartet. A very beautiful version of this "Death and the Maiden". 🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @alvarobitran
    @alvarobitran 2 года назад +2

    Amazing , as usual. Thank you, an opportunity to learn.

  • @alastairboles4437
    @alastairboles4437 11 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing ❤

  • @lisapotter3052
    @lisapotter3052 2 года назад +1

    Fabulous ‼️🌸💖💕 Have their CD but would have loved to be there enjoying this live.

  • @terrasutura9971
    @terrasutura9971 Год назад +2

    Потрясающе!!!... ❤️❤️❤️

  • @wric01
    @wric01 Год назад

    Top notch recording, clap clap.

  • @KosteckiAdam
    @KosteckiAdam Год назад +3

    wunderbar!!

    • @mellebj
      @mellebj Год назад

      ja, natûrlish

  • @thuyviola
    @thuyviola 4 месяца назад

    Wish can hear them live one day 🙏

  • @phonixausderasche538
    @phonixausderasche538 Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Carlos-qz7ul
    @Carlos-qz7ul 6 месяцев назад

    Assez époustouflante cette violoniste 😮 dont je ne soupçonnais pas l'existence, accompagnée d'autres (très) fines lames 🙏😊

  • @otabegoro
    @otabegoro 10 месяцев назад

    Corina Belcea is really a true artist

  • @shupingwang3392
    @shupingwang3392 Год назад

    Belcea is source of energy and limitation of this ensemble.

  • @malcolmfraser2066
    @malcolmfraser2066 2 года назад +1

    Anyone know what's the music in the opening credits?

  • @Ian24s
    @Ian24s 2 года назад +1

    32:48 Let's get a grip

  • @reinhardstiebler8913
    @reinhardstiebler8913 4 месяца назад

    I hate the commercials, by which those insentient brutes are massacring the heavenly music.

    • @staffanolofsson8201
      @staffanolofsson8201 4 месяца назад

      But you know how you can get rid of commersials? The best way is of course to pay for it..

  • @ddelaura
    @ddelaura 20 дней назад

    Why the exposition in the first movement is not repeated ? Bad, bad attitude.

  • @alexanderv4042
    @alexanderv4042 Год назад +2

    Not all the repeats need to be taken. Spare the audience. Also, speaking of sparing the audience - this performance does bare too much freedom (aka too much of me, not enough of music, of Schubert, of the piece). The difference between interpretation and bathing in your own juice of “me, me, me and more me” is still there. A true artist knows the difference = services the music.

    • @allangreen4492
      @allangreen4492 Год назад +7

      It seems that you are in a minority of one in your diatribe. This splendid performance did not 'bear' too much freedom, and the audience did not need to be 'spared'. They clearly enjoyed it enormously, judging by the applause. True artists don't 'service' the music as you put it - they 'serve' it.

    • @mellebj
      @mellebj Год назад

      Haters gonna hate I guess

    • @mellebj
      @mellebj Год назад

      Well said my dude

    • @user-kh2bi4cp1b
      @user-kh2bi4cp1b Год назад

      @@mellebj I think Alexander prefers "Troll and the Maiden"!

    • @tomboyer5608
      @tomboyer5608 Год назад +7

      Obviously not a comment from someone who knows this piece or quartet playing in general. Interpretively this is a restrained and tasteful performance. Tempos are steady, not a whole lot of rubato, and the dynamics and tempos very much as as Schubert wrote them. It's the incredible execution that makes the music more shocking. Schubert never heard it played like this. Even the best players of Schubert's time could barely handle the technical difficulties, let alone play it like this.
      The emotion and drama is very much in the piece itself -- the heart of it is the slow movement, variations on a song Schubert wrote as a young man based on a famous poem where Death comes to claim a young maiden who doesn't want to die. What you hear in Corina Belcea's exquisite playing in that famous first variation is the weeping (complete with halting breaths) of the heartbroken girl. This is German romanticism at its most transcendent.
      The other layer is that this was written near the end of Schubert's life when he was dealing with his own impending mortality -- he was dying of syphilis. Blame Schubert if you don't like the drama, but don't blame the performers.