Béla Bartók - String Quartet No. 3, Sz. 85
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 มิ.ย. 2024
- Béla Bartók - String Quartet No. 3, Sz. 85 (1927)
Performed by the Takács Quartet
Prima parte. Moderato - 0:00
Seconda parte. Allegro - 4:50
Recapitulazione della prima parte. Moderato - 10:21
Coda. Allegro molto - 13:26
Source of Audio - • Bartók: The String Qua...
7:34 is still one of the best uses of col legno ever
This performance is definitely the most "Pesante" I've heard. Thanks
It's jy phenomenal. My no 1 classical work. He was not pissing about.
My favorite work by Bartok!
0:00 - 2:38
A battle which one cannot win
4:48 - 5:20
Incredibly mysterious
I personally like to listen to the Belcea Quartet for this piece but I just can’t get over how creative this music is. I love all the intricate rhythms, the contrasts and how cleverly integrated the “quirks” are. I also love how compact yet dense it is which really gives it a great momentum and not having any parts go on for too long. This is hands down one of my favorite pieces of music ever and also the coda is exhilarating!
Bartoks string quartets are extraordinary.
Really?
Takács's interpretations of Bartók's quartets are just phenomenal. The album this is from is one of my absolute favorites.
00:00 : Prima parte. Moderato
03:42 : Musique inspirée par le style folklorique
04:50 : Seconda parte. Allegro
07:34 : Passage con legno
08:11 : Fugue
08:38 : Sul ponticello
09:30 : Glissandi
10:21 : Recapitulazione della prima parte. Moderato
13:26 : Coda. Allegro molto
Bartok's String Quartet No.3, composed in 1927, is dedicated to, and most likely commissioned by the Philadelphia Musical Fund Society.
Genius
5:16 후기조성
Is there any Béla Bartók music that DOESN'T sound like it belongs in a horror movie or with a setting of a dreary, damp manor or castle haunted by melancholy? ;)
Not the string quartets for sure! Some of the piano music is lighter in character, like the Rumanian Folk Songs and the Suite.
5:20
Mostly this piece I listened was gotten from TwoSetViolin's video: 5 Levels of String Quartet Sightreading
This piece is mathematically musical.
Mathematically? Even Lutosławski, when asked about mathematics in his music, laughed and replied that he used simple arithmetic, not math
@@Qazwdx111 Oh... Lutosławski used simple arithmetic?!
@@princianorvz I don't know how ironic you are but you can guess that Bartók used no more math than Lutosławski. I really, really doubt that Bartók used second isomorphism theorem to compose music
@@Qazwdx111I'd love to hear a piece using the Yoneda lemma.
@@evemoonlit8347 So go ahead and compose. I would love to hear it with you :3