Skip to content

Beautifully balanced

Paul Griffiths, New York Times

A lot of young string quartets these days have you sitting on the edge of your seat. With the Wihan Quartet, which played at the Frick Collection on Tuesday evening, you lean back, and your ears quietly put their feet up.

“The sound these Czech musicians make — beautifully balanced, centered in warm, dark regions of tone color, musical in every part — is deeply pleasurable and also deeply traditional.”

They are continuing the long history of Central European quartet playing, a fact they duly recognize in taking their name from Hanus Wihan, who founded the Bohemian Quartet a century ago.

It is no insult to Leos Cepicky, their first violin, to say that he is not their leader. Nobody leads. The music leads. These players have very little use for the nods and glances that many quartets use to communicate as much with their audiences as with one another.

“When the Wihan musicians need to make a sudden entry together, they just do so; abrupt chords are firmly in place, and sonorous from the strength in each note.”

Yet their performances do not sound at all drilled, but rather thought through and felt through. The Wihan’s playing is roomy with rubato, and the musicians regroup with natural ease around whichever of them has the main line at the moment.

“Going with the flow like this requires an alertness that was largely hidden, to the music’s benefit.”

Mr. Cepicky — performing as part of the flow, not its originator — was able to find persistent grace and loveliness in the first violin part. Playing as his partner, by no means his subordinate, Jan Schulmeister showed what fine music the second violinist gets to play. He came over as a more varied spirit than Mr. Cepicky, and a nice contrast.

On the viola line, Jiri Zigmund is another superb musician. A very characteristic moment for this ensemble came in its Dvorak quartet, Opus 51 in E flat, when he had to imitate a theme played by Mr. Cepicky, and did so with a little more leisure and grandeur, without at all upsetting any of his colleagues.

Throughout the concert, the cellist, Ales Kasprik, offered bass support that was reliable without being overprojected. He also played a nice hand of resonant pizzicatos in Beethoven’s C major ”Razumovsky” Quartet.

You may also like to see...
Wihan Quartet Ref 01 Please Credit Petra Hajska Smed
Virtuoso technical skills and exuberant yet disciplined expression

Frank Kuznik, BachTrack
Four Stars

Conjured superbly

Malcolm Hayes, BBC Music Magazine
Five Stars

Wihan Quartet Ref 09 Please Credit Petra Hajska Smed
A sophisticated and subtle performance

Claire Seymour, See and Heard International

Relaxed and refined performances

Jan Smaczny, BBC Music Magazine

Wihan Quartet Ref 01 Please Credit Petra Hajska Smed
Winningly beautiful

Steve Draper, BachTrack
Five Stars

Rhetorical spiritedness and clean brilliance

Seen and Heard International, Claire Seymour

The Wihan Quartet imposed a quiet control

Seen and Heard International, Claire Seymour

Superbly poised

Jan Smaczny, BBC Music Magazine
Four Stars

Persuasively lyrical

Rob Cowan, Gramophone

Perfectly blended ensemble

Seen and Heard International, Claire Seymour

Utter sincerity and conviction

Graham Rickson, The Arts Desk

Crisp ensemble, rich textures

Classical Reviewer

Profoundly lyrical

Tim Homfray, The Strad Magazine

Tantalising expressive ambivalence

Julian Haylock, The Strad Magazine

This is the finest recorded performance I have encountered

Jan Smaczny, BBC Music Magazine
Five Stars

The Wihans play most beautifully

Rob Cowan, Gramophone

The quartet never put a foot wrong

Bachtrack

Intense and beautifully controlled

The Times, Stephen Pettitt

Tight ensemble and vigour

Colin Clarke, Music Web International

Exquisite shading

Colin Clarke, Musicweb International

Back To Top
16/04/2026