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Chiaroscuro Quartet: Haydn, String Quartets Op. 33 1-3.I've never been a fan of HIP (Historically Informed Performance) style. In this case, however, it is absolutely stunning. The quartet plays on 1700's instruments using gut strings. The whole conception of chamber music changes for me. The artists noted how different it was for them to use gut strings. For example, they had to make changes in timing to accommodate the swift drop off in sound. Soundstage is broad and deep. The Quartet surrounds the center channel, each with appropriate distance from one another. The strings sound warm and robust, as they should.Reviews:-- Charlotte Gardner from Gramophone writes, "...this is a set begging to be served up with lashings of joy, and that’s precisely what the Chiaroscuro Quartet have done... ...It’s that combination of crisp, earthy clarity and lively, virtuoso sparkle that marks these readings out..."-- A review of one of their other albums. Adrian Quanjer - May 10, 2017, "Perfection. Pure perfection. That’s what we have here and in multi-format. Not only the playing but also the bowing, the minute phrasing, the ‘justesse’, the musical involvement… and all the rest."All of their releases are listed here: https://www.hraudio.net/search.php?format=0&keywords=Chiaroscuro+QuartetTech Specs:-- Available as CD, SACD and download (at eClassical)-- Catalog # BIS-2668-- Venue: Menuhin Hall, The Yehudi Menuhin School, Stoke d'Abernon, England-- Recording Date: 26th—29th October 2021-- Release Date: May, 2023.-- Recording Engineer: Editing and mixing: Oscar Torres-- Original Recording Format: PCM 24/192