Calder Quartet – Press
Reviews
Disney Hall
L.A. Phil’s ‘Noon to Midnight’ marathon evokes the sounds of our city, grumbles and all
LA TimesNovember 19, 2024
“the Calder Quartet brought exquisite warmth to the sunny, slippery melodic lines in Missy Mazzoli’s “Death Valley Junction.”
Calder Quartet warms Chicago’s deep freeze with sterling concert
Chicago Classical ReviewJanuary 15, 2024
“Calder played with absolute technical precision and a musical conviction that made you hold your breath for fear of missing anything.”
SummerFest
Thomas Adès enthralls SummerFest audience with dazzling pianism and profound chamber music
The San Diego Union-TribuneAugust 8, 2023
“The Calder Quartet played Adès with an authority that belied the technical problems they had to surmount to play so confidently.”
Album Review: Calder Quartet, ‘Eclectic Currents’
Strings MagazineNovember 12, 2020
“All the works emerge slowly into existence, taking music that’s basically black and white and turning it into music noir which, as Andrew Norman’s Sabina makes clear, is going to have the intensity of a late-Beethoven quartet in a repetitive dialog, with each of the instruments playing many parts.”
Calder Quartet: Beethoven Hillborg
Classical Modern MusicMay 24, 2019
“with repeated listens I have been smiling a good deal as I hear… as to the performances, they are warm, very personal and intimate in keeping with the tenor of the music.”
Adès’s Quartets Stack Up Well in Calder Quartet’s Performance
Classical VoiceApril 18, 2017
“The writing doesn’t lie well; it’s in the high register and, in a sea of accidentals, the performers are lucky to play an occasional open string — but you’d never guess it from Wednesday’s lighthearted performance. Really, this was true of the whole evening: Adès’s quartets are, on the continuum of contemporary chamber works, fairly difficult. Yet it all looked easy and fun.”
Andrew Norman’s Sabina
Calder Quartet brings clarity and commitment to music old and new
Boston Classical ReviewFebruary 21, 2015
“[They] play with crystalline communication [it’s] a clear, uniformly blended, and transparent ensemble sound that is capable of changing colors on a dime.”
EMPAC
Quartet a delight in Troy
Times UnionNovember 3, 2013
“The Calder Quartet towers above every other string quartet this reviewer heard this year (or any other year). Each player intensely listens and watches the others, especially the first violinist, and the group sounds as one organism. Never out of tune or rhythm, with amazing dynamic range verging on the impossible, phrasing with elegant nuance, and dramatic and gutsy playing as well as tender delicacy, this group has it all. Plus it has the musicality to perform in any style, ultramodern as well as classical.”
Rockport Chamber Music Festival
Calder Quartet: Hidden Dimensions
Boston GlobeJune 23, 2013
“Performances like these — freshly rethought, impeccably played — do more than provide enjoyable listening. They reveal hidden dimensions, renew a bond with the composer, and justify the continuance of familiar works in the repertory.”
MATA Festival
Calder Quartet: Music With and Without Musicians
The New York TimesApril 21, 2010
“Tuesday’s concert by the superb Calder Quartet showed that the time-honored string quartet format still provides fertile ground for innovation and surprise in the hands of imaginative, skillful creators.”
Calder Plays Beethoven
The Washington Post“The Calder’s Beethoven was full of flaring drama, furrowed brows and quiet intensity. But, with the tightest of ensemble playing and well-judged balancing of instrumental voices, the piece retained its classical integrity and polished finish.”
Zipper Concert Hall
Calder at Zipper Concert Hall
LA Times“I’ve written before that every time I hear the Calder, the ensemble seems to have reached a new level. That remains true, and now only the stars are the limit, as the Calder takes its place as one of America’s most satisfying — and most enterprising — quartets.”
BEETHOVEN String Quartets Op 18/3, Op 131 (Calder Quartet)
Gramophone“while the Calders’ Beethoven is historically informed only in the loosest possible sense – tempos are fresh, rhythms are buoyant and vibrato is deployed as expression demands – their performances have something of the spirit of the composer’s own era.”
Calder Quartet series at Transformer Station gets off to auspicious start
Cleveland.com“Programs like that – the first of several afforded by the group’s ongoing residency at the Oberlin Conservatory – are simply too rare. Would that more ensembles had what it takes to present 20th-century music in such a concentrated, illuminating, and bold manner.”