It has been awhile since anyone recorded a new disc of
Charles Ives' string quartets, and here the
Blair String Quartet takes the plunge. He only wrote two numbered quartets that are like equivalents to night and day -- the radiant, camp meeting-inspired First Quartet and the furiously punk-meets-transcendentalism Second. String Quartet No. 1, "From the Salvation Army," dates from 1898 and contains some of
Ives' finest instrumental music couched in a reasonably stable and conventional style. The opening Chorale of the First Quartet is decidedly not played at a pace of Andante and appears uncharacteristically zippy. The
Blair, in its haste, fudges a key transition in the last third of the piece. However, this need for speed works well for the second-movement Prelude, although it fails to cover for a rough edit at one point. The Offertory is all right, but experienced ears are starved for more "love" in this music -- a case of point would be the old Vox LP of the First Quartet by the
Kohon String Quartet, where the music is handled lovingly, and not in a winking, tongue-in-cheek manner.
The only other works
Ives wrote for string quartet are the Scherzo Holding Your Own and the Intermezzo from the cantata The Celestial Country. Here the
Blair opts only for the Scherzo, and it's good -- the quartet does a decent job of spelling out the wedge shape in the middle section, which you are supposed to be able to see in your mind in addition to hearing. It is a pity the
Blair did not include the Intermezzo, which would have made this survey truly complete, not to mention bringing the program past the 50-minute mark. Judging from the way the similar First Quartet comes off, perhaps it's for the better that the
Blair Quartet didn't record it.
The
Blair seem almost impatient to get to the Second Quartet, which is a work they seem to know well and have probably played for a while, judging from the gloss and sheen on the second-movement "Arguments," which is normally pretty messy business. The opening of "The Call of the Mountains" is very nicely done and paced with a view to achieve the hypnotic transcendence that
Ives indicates were his intentions. Nevertheless, once you get into the three against four sections, the reading tends to get a little sharply defined and propulsive -- rather stirring up the mood. Therefore, while the
Blair turns in a good reading of the Second Quartet, it's still a mixed bag. If you need an inexpensive recording of the
Ives quartets, then this will fit the bill, although one almost wishes for such purpose that Vox would simply bring the Kohon Quartet recording back.