The evening opened with Tchaikovsky's Album pour enfants, arranged for string quartet by one of the founders of the Borodin Quartet, violinist Rostislav Dubinsky. With every one of the 24 short pieces – originally meant for piano practice for the young – the quartet's flawless cooperation and the perfection of each stroke was manifest. Since the piece is not meant as a showcase for virtuosity, the result was an utterly enjoyable performance, with the quartet performing fully as an entity. They played masterly through the various styles of the mostly one-minute-long pieces: the subtlety of the first ones (for instance, Morning Prayer), the energy of the latter (German and Neapolitan Airs) and the unusual instrumentation of others (Baba Yaga). The highlight was the cellist's pizzicato in The New Doll.
Schubert's posthumously published Quartet Movement in C minor, D.703 was meant to be part of the Twelfth String Quartet, but it was never completed. The proficiency of the players here was once again breathtaking. In this compact, ten-minute piece, moods wander back and forth between tempestuous instability and pastoral idylls, and all this was done with great success by the performers. A highlight was, once again, the cellist's pizzicato, which served both as a harmonic and a percussive support to the first violin during the melodious pastoral passages, played with matching proficiency. After a work of such beauty, one is left wondering how the complete work would have sounded, had it ever existed.
After the interval, the viola opened Shostakovich's Sixth String Quartet majestically. Meant as a birthday present to himself, the work is full of both joyful and gloomy passages, which the musicians handled flawlessly. It is a work that greatly builds upon near repetition of passages, but with slightly changed harmony or a few different notes, all of which result in a greatly nuanced character. Once again, the Borodin Quartet excelled. The third movement Lento was the highlight of this superb performance, thanks to the utter expressivity of the players.