Borodin Quartet
For more than seventy years, the Borodin Quartet has been celebrated for its insight and authority in the chamber music repertoire. Revered for its searching performances of Beethoven and Shostakovich, the Quartet is equally at home in music ranging from Mozart to Stravinsky.
Described by the Daily Telegraph Australia as “the Russian grand masters”, the Borodin Quartet’s particular affinity with Russian repertoire is based on constant promotion, performances and recording of the pillars of Russian string quartet music - Borodin, Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich, as well as Glinka, Stravinsky, Prokofiev and Schnittke.
The Quartet is universally recognised for its genuine interpretation of Russian music, generating critical acclaim all over the world; the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung writes about them “here we have not four individual players, but a single sixteen-stringed instrument of great virtuosity”.
The Quartet's connection with Shostakovich's chamber music is intensely personal, since it was stimulated by a close relationship with the composer, who personally supervised its study of each of his quartets. Widely regarded as definitive interpretations, the Quartet’s cycles of the complete Shostakovich's quartets have been performed all over the world, including Vienna, Zurich, Frankfurt, Madrid, Lisbon, Seville, London, Paris and New York. The idea of performing a complete cycle of Shostakovich's quartets originated with the Borodin Quartet. In recent seasons, the ensemble has returned to a broader repertoire, including works by Schubert, Prokofiev, Borodin and Tchaikovsky, while continuing to be welcomed and acclaimed at major venues throughout the world.
The Borodin Quartet was formed in 1945 by four students from the Moscow Conservatory and remains one of the very few existing established chamber ensembles with uninterrupted longevity. The world has changed beyond recognition since 1945; the Borodin Quartet, meanwhile, has retained its commitment to tonal beauty, technical excellence and penetrating musicianship. The ensemble’s cohesion and vision have survived successive changes in personnel, thanks not least to the common legacy shared by its members from their training at the Moscow Conservatory. The current members of the Quartet are Ruben Aharonian, Sergei Lomovsky, Igor Naidin and Vladimir Balshin.
In addition to performing quartets, the Borodin Quartet regularly joins forces with other distinguished musicians to further explore the chamber music repertoire. Their partners have included Sviatoslav Richter, Yuri Bashmet, Michael Collins, Alexei Volodin, Mario Brunello, Elisabeth Leonskaja, Christoph Eschenbach, Boris Berezovsky, Denis Matsuev and Nikolai Lugansky. The Quartet have also recently collaborated with Vladimir Jurowski in Dresden performing the Martinu and Schulhoff concertos for orchestra and string quartet, a partnership which they will repeat this season in Moscow and next season in London.
The Quartet also regularly receives invitations to give masterclasses, and to serve as jury members at major international competitions. Highlights in 2017/18 include performances at Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Wigmore Hall London, Vancouver Playhouse, 92nd St Y New York, Toronto Summer Music Festival, Music and Beyond Festival Ottawa, Stockholm Concert Hall, National Concert Hall Dublin, Aix-en-Provence, Philharmonie Paris, Palau de la Musica de Valencia, Società dei Concerti di Milano, and Moscow, with tours of Italy and The Netherlands; playing quartets of Schubert, Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich, Myaskovsky, Beethoven, Haydn, Wolf - and of course Borodin. Chamber music partners in 2017/18 include Barry Douglas, Elisabeth Leonskaja, Dmitry Masleev, Alexei Volodin, and mezzo soprano Karine Deshayes.
The Quartet’s first release on the Onyx label, featuring Borodin, Schubert, Webern and Rachmaninov, was nominated for a Grammy in 2005 in the “Best Chamber Performance” category. The Borodin Quartet has produced a rich heritage of recordings over several decades, for labels including EMI, RCA and Teldec, including the Complete Beethoven quartets for CHANDOS. The Quartet’s recording of the complete Shostakovich String Quartet Cycle for Decca will be released in August 2018, following the first release in the cycle, a dedicated 70th anniversary CD (of string quartets Nos.1, 8, and 14), released in March 2015.
“The playing was rich-toned and dramatic, in ways that seemed authentically Russian, and the technique was formidable.”
“The playing was never heart-on-sleeve; telling restraint was the keynote, allied to a chastely beautiful tone and a quality of intense, inward listening.”
“His playing was a model of chamber-music adaptability: His emotional presence was admirably focused but projected with a subtlety that matched the group's temperament.”
“It would be difficult to find a more beautiful sound to listen to: impeccable in intonation, rich and fully integrated, with refined shape to the lines and a special communication in the voicings.”
Performers Borodin Quartet, Sviatoslav Richter & Ludmila Berlinskaya