Two of the world’s leading string quartets, the Ebène and the Belcea, come together to perform octets written 75 years apart by two phenomenally gifted teenage composers, Felix Mendelssohn and George Enescu. The two ensembles, the Ebène based in Paris and the Belcea in London, first joined forces almost a decade ago and have developed their collaboration since then. When they played the Mendelssohn and Enescu octets in Philadelphia in November 2024, The Strad – an authoritative voice in the world of string music – wrote: “The phrase ‘luxury casting’ gets tossed around a lot, but seemed entirely appropriate here, as these two distinguished groups effortlessly fused their expertise – and had a blast doing it. The gutsy results had many people in the audience standing before the interval …” While Pierre Colombet, first violinist of Quatuor Ébène, takes the lead in Mendelssohn’s symphonically conceived octet, Corinna Belcea, founder of the eponymous quartet, captains the eight-person ensemble in the Enescu. Though trained in the UK, she, like George Enescu, was born in Romania. He was just 18, and living in Paris, when he wrote his octet in 1900, while Mendelssohn was even younger – a mere 16 years old – when he composed his octet in 1825 as a birthday gift for his violin teacher.
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