Review By Grant Chu Covell,La Folia,May 2012
Ligeti made his mark on the 20th century…The First…reveals deep understanding of Bartók’s quartets…The Parker looks past the grit and embraces Ligeti’s confidence in the medium. The two movements from 1950 serve as footnotes, revealing yet another easygoing non-modern composer from the century’s start. © 2012 La Folia Read complete review
Review By Bob Neill,Positive Feedback Online,March 2012
The Parkers on this Naxos CD caused the Tocaros to jump and dance about Funk’s largish listening room to the delight and astonishment of all assembled. They are as good on Ligeti as the Pacificas are on Carter, which is saying a lot.
Ligeti’s quartets are among the best modern music there is—the next step (forward? sideways? up?) from his countryman/predecessor Bartók’s; and this is the best recording I’ve heard of them. This album is a great introduction to the composer—and the sound is as good as the musicianship and music. © 2012 Positive Feedback Online Read complete review
Review By Leslie Wright,MusicWeb International,December 2010
MusicWeb International Recordings of the Year 2010
This young quartet has nothing to fear from the competition in these works, either in the Bartókian first quartet or the more radical second. The early Andante and Allegro is a balm to the ears after the quartets and a good way to conclude this bargain.
Review By Leslie Wright,MusicWeb International,December 2010
MusicWeb International Recordings of the Year 2010
This young quartet has nothing to fear from the competition in these works, either in the Bartókian first quartet or the more radical second. The early Andante and Allegro is a balm to the ears after the quartets and a good way to conclude this bargain.
Review By Leslie Wright,MusicWeb International,December 2010
This young quartet has nothing to fear from the competition in these works, either in the Bartókian first quartet or the more radical second. The early Andante and Allegro is a balm to the ears after the quartets and a good way to conclude this bargain.
Review By Allen Gimbel,American Record Guide,May 2010
This is very much music of its time, and it has not aged well.
The program closes with the very early Andante and Allegretto, a couple of lovely pastoral scraps from 1950 written when the composer was just an innocent lad of 27. This piece has absolutely no intimations of what was to come. These are two gentle and quite British tonal movements that sound neither Hungarian nor modern, but are definitely useful as drop-the-laser fare. The Parker Quartet comes out of the Quartet program at NEC, and has the measure of all these stylistically varied pieces.
Review By Leslie Wright,MusicWeb International,April 2010
Review By Leslie Wright,MusicWeb International,April 2010
Listening to these quartets makes one regret all the more that Ligeti did not fulfill his plan to compose a third quartet, as Richard Whitehouse noted in his accompanying detailed essay. Nonetheless, one can be thankful for the two outstanding works on this disc. They give ample evidence of a real successor to Béla Bartók in the genre. These quartets have been recorded a number of times, but the Parker approach these works as if newly discovered. My first exposure to them came via the Arditti Quartet in Sony’s Ligeti Edition, an invaluable compendium (later taken over by Warner as the Ligeti Project) of the vast majority of the composer’s oeuvre. I still value the Arditti’s accounts highly, as I do those of the younger Artemis Quartet on Virgin. Now we have the first “bargain” set by another young group that I had not heard of before. Right off, I will state that the Parker Quartet has nothing whatsoever to fear from its illustrious predecessors. It was also good to include the early Andante and Allegretto, even if it shows little in the way of hallmarks of the mature Ligeti. The quartets belong to two distinct stages in the composer’s life: the first from his “Hungarian” period before he left for the West, and the second from his more experimental years spent in Germany. How fortunate it would have been if Ligeti had given us an example late in his life when his compositions became a synthesis of the experimental and the more folk-oriented music of the earlier period. Alas, it was not to be.
The Quartet No. 1, while owing no small debt to Bartók, has Ligeti’s identity firmly stamped on it from the beginning. As Whitehouse points out, it is in one continuous movement that can be divided into anywhere from four to eight sections. The Artemis Quartet’s recording has twelve tracks for the quartet and the Arditti eight, while the present one divides the work into four sections. I can think of no better introduction to Ligeti than this work, unless it be his Musica ricercata for piano or the Six Bagatelles for Wind Quintet, an adaptation of six of the piano pieces from the former work, both written in the period of the quartet. Indeed, Ligeti quotes the Vivace energico from the Musica ricercata or the Presto ruvido movement from the Bagatelles, the wind version of that movement, just before the “one minute mark” on the third track, following a delightfully humorous waltz. There is much comedy typical of this composer throughout the quartet, and the Parkers relish the humour without overdoing it. Their many slides are more pronounced than those by the Arditti, their pizzicati more vehement, and their pauses longer. They are obviously having a great deal of fun with the work, whereas the Arditti and to a lesser extent the Artemis project greater experience with the work, not to say that either quartet is bored with it. Having heard this quartet many times in the past, I was struck by their sheer
more....
Review By Aron Sayed,www.klassik.com,April 2010
Interpretation: 
Klangqualität: 
Repertoirewert: 
Booklet: 
Wer György Ligetis (1923–2006) Streichquartett Nr. 1 mit dem Beinamen ‚Nächtliche Metamorphosen‘ kennt, wird wahrscheinlich zustimmen, dass es bei diesem wilden, 1953 und 1954 komponierten Werk für das Publikum über weite Strecken angebrachter wäre, nicht still zu sitzen, sondern einen Pulk zu bilden, um sich tanzend gegenseitig durch die Gegend zu schubsen. Im Vokabular des Heavy Metals findet sich ein Wort dafür: Moshen. Der rhythmischen Radikalität und motorischen Ansteckungskraft von Ligetis beiden Streichquartetten wird die jüngst bei Naxos erschienene Einspielung mit dem Parker Quartet vollauf gerecht.
Lauscht man dem sich in höchste Lagen schraubenden Unisono-Rhythmus zu Beginn des ‚Presto‘-Abschnitts im ersten Satz von ‚Nächtliche Metamorphosen‘ oder dem ‚Presto furioso, brutale, tumultuoso‘ des zweiten Quartetts von 1968, bleiben hinsichtlich interpretatorischer Professionalität und Emphase des Tonfalls kaum Wünsche offen. Mit beinahe traumwandlerischer Sicherheit folgt das noch junge Parker Quartet im ‚Allegro nervoso‘ des Quartetts Nr. 2 den abrupten Wechseln zwischen statischen Klangflächen a la ‚Atmosphères‘ oder ‚Lontano‘ und Eindrücke von Chaos beschwörenden Ausbrüchen im Fortissimo. Ein ums andere Mal begeistert, wie ausgeprägt bei den vier Musizierenden der Sinn für Ligetis Gleiten von Prozess- in Geräuschhaftigkeit und umgekehrt ist.
Grazile Gebilde wie das alle vier Sätze von ‚Nächtliche Metamorphosen‘ durchziehende, immer neue Verwandlungen erlebende Viertonmotiv gelangen genauso zur Geltung wie der maschinelle Charakter des ‚Come un meccanismo di precisione‘ überschriebenen Pizzicato-Satzes im zweiten Quartett. Sicher, vergleicht man vorliegende Interpretationen mit denen des etablierten Arditti-Quartetts, so wirken einige Passagen vom Klang her etwas zu ‚metallisch‘, der ruppige Gestus in seiner Permanenz ein wenig einseitig. Gerade die aus Ligetis fantasievollen Dissonanzen hervorgehenden Klangfarben könnten manchmal mit noch mehr Gespür herausgearbeitet werden. Solche Winzigkeiten stören aber eigentlich gar nicht. Insgesamt kann man die Flexibiliät und nahezu vollendete Spieltechnik des Parker Quartet nur bewundern. Dies zumal gerade Flexibilität für eine gelungene Interpretation der Streichquartette des Ungarn von hoher Bedeutung ist. Denn wer den im dritten Satz von ‚Nächtliche Metamorphosen‘ leise anhebenden Walzer und seine gleich darauffolgende lustvolle Zerstörung prägnant zur Darstellung bringen will, wer gleichermaßen auf die explosiven klanglichen Reibungen und komplexen Strukturen dieser Werke abzielt, dem bleibt nichts anderes übrig.
more....
Review By Dirk Wieschollek,Fono Forum,March 2010

8.570781_Fono Forum_032010_gr.pdf
Review By Jean-Yves Duperron,Classical Music Sentinel,March 2010
…Andante and Allegro will strike you as a much more idyllic piece of music, very reminiscent of Ralph Vaughan Williams for example, and a work from a completely different world than the 2nd quartet.
The musicians that comprise the Parker Quartet are simply amazing. They play with a commitment and level of energy rarely encountered. For a young ensemble, they play with a maturity and assured emotional control usually common to only more established groups. They expose the context of the music admirably well, and deliver a sound that grabs your immediate attention and doesn’t let go. The Naxos recording was captured in a church and creates the perfect ambience for this music.
Review By Pierre Rigaudière,Diapason,March 2010

8.570781_Diapason_032010_fr.pdf
Review By Uncle Dave Lewis,Allmusic.com,February 2010
This Naxos release, Ligeti: String Quartets Nos. 1 and 2, is the debut recording of the Parker Quartet, a group founded in 2002 and based in Boston; it is named after the Omni Parker House, a Boston landmark that has been in operation since 1855. One might wonder why this comparatively newly minted group would take on such a tough assignment as Ligeti’s quartet literature for its first recording and it is mainly because it is a fearless, well-disciplined, and supremely confident quartet. Ligeti’s music seems to appeal to the group’s youthful impetuousness and the Parker Quartet has more than an ample amount of muscle, self control, and sensitivity to have mastered these highly dynamic and challenging twentieth century quartets. The Second Quartet is particularly difficult; there is a spot in the first movement Allegro nervoso where the quartet is already very busy playing rapid figures at a sub-pianissimo level and has to switch—at a mere bar line’s notice—to fortissimo without essentially changing what notes are being played. The Parker Quartet performs this audio equivalent to a cinematic jump cut on a hairpin, and throughout the music is completely well elucidated with no fuss, no muss, expert precision, and a considerable flair for drama. The Parker Quartet brings the same level of care and attention to everything on the program, even the simpler and more modestly stated Andante and Allegretto that conclude the album. While not recorded as often as, say, Beethoven’s late cycle of quartets, the full-length Ligeti quartets have gotten plenty of attention on disc, yet this Naxos release with the Parker Quartet seems just as good if not better than any of the other recordings that include both quartets. Doubtless the Parker Quartet is a group to keep an ear out for.
more....
Review By David Weininger,The Boston Globe,January 2010
The Parker Quartet is one of four ensembles to have come out of New England Conservatory’s prestigious Professional String Quartet Training Program. Like the other three, the Parker—which graduated from the program in 2008 and whose members were also undergraduates at NEC—has started down the often treacherous path of being a full-time, professional quartet.
The quartet recently released its second CD: the two string quartets of Hungarian composer György Ligeti, along with an early Andante and Allegretto (Naxos). If these recordings are anything to go by, the Parker’s future is bright indeed. Both quartets consist of knotty, difficult music. The first, written in the mid-1950s, takes off from Bartok and is full of the older master’s angular melodies, jarring rhythms, and crunchy dissonances; the second—one of Ligeti’s best-known chamber pieces—unveils a kaleidoscope of unusual textures.
The Parkers tear through this music with both pinpoint precision and a spectacular sense of urgency. Whether the music floats or pounds, they play with a confidence of those speaking a native language.
The quartet’s website features two videos made at the recording sessions, and for all the music’s nervous intensity, the Parker Quartet’s members seem to radiate an air of calm mastery over it. For years, the preferred recording of these two works has been that by the Arditti String Quartet in Sony’s Ligeti Edition; this is the first real competition to come along, as the Parkers match them at virtually every turn.
Hopefully the quartet, currently in its second season in residence with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, will soon make a visit to its old stomping ground. Until then, this excellent CD will serve as proof positive of its potential.
more....
Review By Infodad.com,January 2010
The works on these three CDs, all of them nominally chamber music, exist in very different sound worlds—but all of them reflect, in their own ways…The performers, all Czech by training, handle both the grand sweep and the small details of this music with ease and understanding, producing a CD that argues effectively for Dvořák’s importance as a composer of piano quartets, even though he wrote but two of them. And the players do a top-notch job of contrasting the earlier, somewhat more superficial work with the later and deeper one.
Review By Jesus Vega,El Nuevo Herald,January 2010
La música coral y orquestal de Gyorgy Ligeti (1923–2006) logró su merecido reconocimiento para el público en general con su inclusión en la banda sonora de la película 2001: una odisea espacial. Sin embargo, su repertorio de piezas de cámara, que goza de idéntica pasión y calidad, se ignora injustamente. Por fortuna, este registro discográfico le otorga un sitio especial a algunas de estas obras de cámara, en una antología exigente y selecta que desafía el reto de la brevedad, y nos muestra la inusual originalidad de este compositor que abraza la modernidad, la vanguardia y la experimentación, sin renunciar a sus raíces y a la influencia de su compatriota Bartók. Interpreta el Cuarteto Parker.
more....
Review By Mark Stryker,Detroit Free Press,January 2010
The String Quartet No. 1 (1953–54) starts where Bartók leaves off, offering souped-up layers of tangy modalities, asymmetric rhythms, fierce attacks and constantly shifting sonic textures. In the more radical Second Quartet (1968), traditional melody, harmony and meter are replaced by a bewitching sound world of distilled textures, densities, colors, irregular pulse and acoustic instruments that seemingly pine to sound electronic.
The Andante and Allegretto (1950) is an early work whose tight construction, songful opening and folkish finale remind you how grounded Ligeti was in the tradition.
The Parker Quartet brings a secure technique and hot-blooded feeling to the music, balancing lyrical expression with supersonic energy when needed. And the quartet never loses its equilibrium.
more....
Review By Georg Henkel,www.musikansich.de,January 2010
FACETTENREICH
Bei dieser technisch untadeligen und künstlerisch rundum überzeugenden Produktion mit György Ligetis Kompositionen für Streichquartett ragt die Einspielung des 1. Quartetts Métamorphoses nocturnes noch einmal heraus. Dem Parker Quartett gelingt es, dieses 1954 noch in Ungarn für die Schublade komponierte Stück als völlig ebenbürtiges Werk neben dem avancierten zweiten Quartett von 1968 zu präsentieren. Die Kunst liegt in der höchst differenzierten Artikulation und einer immer wieder aufregenden Detailarbeit. Dadurch schaffen es die Parker-Leute, das frühe und lange Zeit zurückgehaltene Werk in jedem Moment zukunftsträchtig klingen zu lassen.
Obwohl das erste Quartett noch im Horizont der unter dem sozialistischen Kulturdiktat verfemten modernen Quartette Bartoks entstand, erscheint in dieser Einspielung die Physiognomie des reifen Ligeti doch schon voll ausgebildet. Die zeigt sich nicht nur in dem bizarren, gleichermaßen surrealen wie nekrophilen Humor, der diesen Variationenzyklus beseelt—ein famoser Danse macabre. Er lässt sich bis in die Klanggestalten und Strukturen hinein verfolgen, die sich ebenso noch im Spätwerk finden: Zum Beispiel die Kompression des Tonraumes oder harsch gegeneinander gesetzte Blöcke, pseudo-maschinelles Ticken, lontano- und moriendo-Momente. Also: Das Vokabular an Möglichkeiten und die musikalische Vision sind im Grunde schon vollständig entwickelt. Nur Syntax und Grammatik mussten sich durch die Auseinandersetzung mit der westeuropäischen Nachkriegsavantgarde noch verändern (ohne die Eigen- und Querständigkeit aufzugeben).
Das Ergebnis dieser Transformation kann man im zweiten Quartett hören, das nach über vierzig Jahren noch nichts von seiner musikalischen Kraft verloren hat. Zwar klingt das Ensemble hier (wohl auch aufnahmebedingt) nicht ganz so präsent und körperlich, wie das Artemis-Quartett (EMI). Doch Attacke und Verve sind vergleichbar elektrisierend, wobei auch hier wieder die Detailarbeit besticht.
Was aus Ligeti hätte werden können, wenn er weniger charakterstark und genialisch gewesen wäre und als angepasster Komponist in Ungarn geblieben wäre, davon vermitteln das 1950 komponierte Andante cantabile und Allegretto capricioso eine Ahnung: handwerklich saubere, eingängige, doch nicht schlichte Musik ist das. Freilich: Wäre der Komponist dabei geblieben, wären die Stücke wohl bald vergessen worden. So aber fügt diese empfehlenswerte Aufnahme dem bekannteren Oeuvre Ligetis mit diesem Appendix eine interessante Facette hinzu.
more....
Review By Zachary Lewis,Cleveland Plain Dealer,December 2009
No one wrote string quartets like Ligeti. A wizard of string effects, the Hungarian pushed instruments to extremes and expanded the genre greatly by unveiling new possibilities of texture and color along the spectrum from violent agitation to pure serenity. It’s challenging music, but the Parker Quartet ensures a vibrant, invigorating experience. Included on the disc are the two complete quartets plus two earlier pieces, revealing both the master’s first and last thoughts in the medium. Grade: A
Back to Main Review Page