“What we have here is one of the bleakest and most beautiful recordings of the year, with all three quartets (particularly the much-recorded No. 8) approached with an immediacy that would make you swear that the ink was barely dry on the page.”
PRESTO CLASSICAL, NOVEMBER 2019
“The PHQ’s formidable combination of almost orchestral depth of tone with mercurial, chamber-music responsiveness lies at the heart of their success in the C minor Eighth Quartet. This is a performance of real weight and incisiveness which nevertheless finds plenty of room for the intensely personal nature of the music.”
EUROPADISC, OCTOBER 2019
“The wonderful Pavel Haas Quartet perform three of Shostakovich’s here: the wartime No 2, a powerfully reflective response to the suffering and anxiety of the time, rigorously and sweepingly argued; the short No 7, written in memory of his first wife, its mix of sweet memories, turbulence and soulful lamentation affectionately captured; and the harrowing No 8, a paean to tragedy and anger, presented here as a crunching finale to this engrossing disc.”
THE SCOTSMAN, OCTOBER 2019
“Its interpretation of the first and third movements are notable. In the former, the performers show the vibrant multi-dimensionality of emotions, ranging from the robust A-major opening to the menacing nature of the middle section. With so many character changes, a significant challenge for any group is to keep the energy flowing throughout. The ensemble does this impressively.”
THE CLASSIC REVIEW, NOVEMBER 2019
“It’s absolutely gut wrenchingly intense. It’s almost unlistenable too, it’s so fabulous, it’s such committed playing, it’s such deep, deep sincerity.”
BBC RADIO 3 RECORD REVIEW, NOVEMBER 2019
“The Czech players are always worth hearing, especially in their angst-ridden account of the biographical C minor quartet (No 8), but also in the forlorn, if fleeting, F sharp minor (No 7), written in memory of his first wife. Their account of the Second Quartet, in A major, is spacious, intense and symphonically conceived.”
THE SUNDAY TIMES, NOVEMBER 2019
“Le jeu des quatre amis tchèques est admirable de suggestion, il a vraiment l’élégance du désespoir, quelque chose de sinistre mais en habit de gala.”
BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE, NOVEMBER 2019
“It’s their lightness of touch that commands; the subtle nuances of colour, line and texture performed with almost spectral intensity.”
BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE, JANUARY 2020