Search - Artemis Quartet: Strings Attached on DVD


Artemis Quartet: Strings Attached
Artemis Quartet Strings Attached
Actors: Artemis Quartet, Verdi, Beethoven, Webern
Director: Monsaigeon
Genres: Indie & Art House, Musicals & Performing Arts
NR     2009     1hr 28min

Strings Attached illustrates how a small group of top musicians, the young Artemis Quartet, live and work together with the aim of perfecting the world's most beautiful musical works. This film focuses on a single piece, o...  more »

     
?

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actors: Artemis Quartet, Verdi, Beethoven, Webern
Director: Monsaigeon
Genres: Indie & Art House, Musicals & Performing Arts
Sub-Genres: Indie & Art House, Classical
Studio: Ideale Audience Intl
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen - Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 02/24/2009
Original Release Date: 01/01/2009
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/2009
Release Year: 2009
Run Time: 1hr 28min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Edition: Classical
MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Languages: German, Russian
Subtitles: English, French

Similar Movies

 

Movie Reviews

Two Bruno Monsaingeon Films of the Artemis Quartet
J Scott Morrison | Middlebury VT, USA | 03/18/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This DVD consists of two films done by the distinguished French music documentarian (and concert violinist) Bruno Monsaingeon. The first, and for me by far the more interesting, is a 2001 hour-long film, 'Strings Attached', consisting of intense rehearsal of Beethoven's Grosse Fuge by and interviews with members of the Artemis Quartet as it was constituted in 2001. (The group has since replaced the second violinist and violist seen in these films.) Watching and hearing the group work at the fine points of their conception of Beethoven's great work is instructive, not only for string players but for general chamber music lovers as well. This is followed by a complete performance of the work in which one can not only be caught up in the Grosse Fuge's marvels but also see how the rehearsals we witnessed affect its final shape. The performance itself is marvelous. It is a particularly fine-boned performance whose approach allows us to be aware of all the fugue's components without coming across as a clinical x-ray. I particularly liked the leadership of first violinist Natalia Prischepenko whose delicate playing has a steely interior spine. The quartet's pianissimi are a wonder. But when they come to the gutsier parts of the fugue they deliver, too.

The second film is of an hour-long concert done in the Théâtre des Bouffes du Nord, Paris, on April 8, 2001. The program consists of Beethoven's Quartet No. 2 in G, Op. 18, No. 2; Verdi's Quartet in E Minor; and Webern's Six Bagatelles, Op. 9. As in the Grosse Fuge, the Beethoven quartet is played with delicacy and suavity. It strikes me as being somewhere between the performances of the Berg Quartet and of the Emerson Quartet, showing the Emerson's clarity and the Berg's expressiveness. Verdi's quartet, his only one, was premiered the day after the premiere of Aida in 1873. It is quintessential Verdi in that it is both melodic and theatrical. The Artemis Quartet are particularly effective in the prestissimo third movement and the finale, Scherzo Fuga, in both of which one hears anticipations of the fairy music in Verdi's Falstaff. Webern's Six Bagatelles, none of which lasts much longer than a minute, are among the most concentrated works in the quartet literature. Each note has its own separate dynamic marking, and tone colors shimmer like the Northern Lights. The Artemis play them as well as any performance I've ever heard, even including those of both the Juilliard and the Arditti quartets. Superb.

Recommended for its intended audience.

Running time: ca. 120 mins; Format: NTSC 16:9; Sound: PCM Stereo; Interviews in German, Russian with subtitles in English, French; Region: 0 (worldwide)

Scott Morrison"
What Is A String Quartet?
Zarathustra | Sacramento, CA USA | 10/30/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Everybody knows: it's four balding old men sitting rather stiffly in a boring room playing even older instruments. Yawn.
Wrong! The string quartet is the most elegant form of classical music, whether it be Schubert's Death and the Maiden, Ravel, Debussy and Bartok, or Beethoven's Great Fugue, one of the most complex quartets ever written.
On this DVD we have two films by Bruno Monsaingeon in 1080HD showing a young Artemis Quartet rehearsing and playing the Great Fugue. There is nothing stuffy about this group and we learn a lot about playing string quartets from their interactions in rehearsal.
If you like this DVD, I think you will like the EuroArts DVDs with the Hagen Quartet, a young quartet from Salzburg.
For more details on this DVD, read Scott Morrison's excellent review."