Schumann Quartett

String Quartet
Management: Spain - Portugal
Artist

The Schumann Quartet has reached a stage where anything is possible, because it has dispensed with certainties. This also has consequences for audiences, which from one concert to the next have to be prepared for all eventualities: “A work really develops only in a live performance,” the quartet says. “That is the 'real thing', because we ourselves never know what will happen. On the stage, all imitation disappears, and you automatically become honest with yourself. Then you can create a bond with the audience – communicate with it in music.”

This live situation will gain an added energy in the near future: Sabine Meyer, Menahem Pressler, Albrecht Mayer, Kit Armstrong, Edgar Moreau and Anna Lucia Richter are among the quartet's current partners. A highlight in the 17/18 season is still its three-year residency at the Chamber Music Society of the Lincoln Center in New York City, which began back in December 2016. The quartet will go on a USA tour and give guest performances at festivals in South America, Italy and Switzerland, as well as at the Mozart Week in Salzburg and the Mozartfest in Würzburg. It will also perform concerts in the big musical metropolises of London, Hamburg, Berlin, Amsterdam, Florence and Paris. In addition, the ensemble is "artiste étoile" at the "Oraniensteiner Konzerte" concert series and is looking foward once more to the two concerts it will give as part of its residency at the Robert-Schumann-Saal in Düsseldorf. Its current album, Landscapes, in which the quartet traces its own roots by combining works of Haydn, Bartók, Takemitsu and Pärt, has been hailed enthusiastically both at home and abroad, among other things receiving five Diapasons and being selected as Editor's Choice by the BBC Music Magazine. The Schumann Quartet was already accorded the 2016 Newcomer Award at the BBC Music Magazine Awards in London for its previous CD Mozart Ives Verdi.

The three brothers Mark, Erik and Ken Schumann have been playing together since their earliest childhood. In 2012, they were joined by violist Liisa Randalu, who was born in the Estonian capital, Tallinn, and grew up in Karlsruhe, Germany. Those who experience the quartet in performance often remark on the strong connection between its members. The four musicians enjoy the way they communicate without words: how a single look suffices to convey how a particular member wants to play a particular passage. Although the individual personalities clearly manifest themselves, a common space arises in every musical work in a process of spiritual metamorphosis. The quartet's openness and curiosity may be partly the result of the formative influence exerted on it by teachers such as Eberhard Feltz, or partners such as Menahem Pressler.

CD releases, study with the Alban Berg Quartet, a residency of many years at the Robert-Schumann-Saal in Düsseldorf, winning the prestigious Concours de Bordeaux along with other awards, various teachers and musical partners – it is always tempting to speculate on what factors have led to many people viewing the Schumann Quartet as one of the best in the world. But the four musicians themselves regard these stages more as encounters, as a confirmation of the path they have taken. They feel that their musical development over the past two years represents a quantum leap. “We really want to take things to extremes, to see how far the excitement and our spontaneity as a group take us,” says Ken Schumann, the middle of the three Schumann brothers. They charmingly sidestep any attempt to categorize their sound, approach or style, and let the concerts speak for themselves.

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Repertoire

Programme I

Joseph Haydn: Divertimento, Op. 1 No. 1 in B-flat major

Dimitri Shostakovich: String Quartet No. 9 in E-flat major, Op. 117

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Bedřich Smetana: String Quartet No. 1 in E minor, “From My Life”

Programme II

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: String Quartet No. 20 in D major, KV 499, “Hoffmeister”

Claude Debussy: String Quartet in G minor, Op. 10

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Félix Mendelssohn: String Quartet No. 4 in E minor, Op. 44 No. 2 MWV R 26

Programme III

Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet No. 7 in F major, Op. 59 No. 1, “Razumovsky”

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Ludwig van Beethoven: String Quartet No. 14 in C-sharp minor, Op. 131

 

Programme IV

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Adagio and Fugue in C minor, K.546

Alban Berg: “Lyric Suite” for string quartet (1926)

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Edvard Grieg: String Quartett No. 1 in G minor, Op. 27

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Reviews
BBC Music Magazine

“Personal and profound.”

Berlinclassicmusic.com

“(…) the to the world-class belonging “Schumann Quartett” with its fine, rhythmic play.”

Süddeutsche Zeitung

“staggeringly well… with sparkling virtuosity and a willingness to astonish.”

The Guardian

“The Schumanns’ performance combined probing intensity with wit and energy, and a wonderful alertness to shifts of mood throughout. An outstanding evening, every second of it.”

Discography