Approaching a Canon
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Franz Schubert

Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

Nationality: Austrian
Born: January 31, 1797, Vienna Died: November 19, 1828, Vienna (age 31)

String Quartet No. 15 in G major, Op. 161, D. 887

(for 2 violins, viola and cello)
17:58 I. Allegro molto moderato
11:54 II. Andante un poco moto
6:59 III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:35 IV. Allegro assai
Duration: 48 minutes (approximately)
Composed: 1826, June 20-30 (age 29)
Premiere: December 8, 1850. Musikverein, Vienna
Published: 1851, Vienna: Diabelli
12 recordings, 45 videos
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22:06
Belcea Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:28
Belcea Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
7:18
Belcea Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:46
Belcea Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
19:35
Takács Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
11:59
Takács Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
6:59
Takács Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:02
Takács Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
22:54
Quartetto Italiano
I. Allegro molto moderato
13:34
Quartetto Italiano
II. Andante un poco moto
7:23
Quartetto Italiano
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
11:20
Quartetto Italiano
IV. Allegro assai
21:44
Doric String Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:22
Doric String Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
7:19
Doric String Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:44
Doric String Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
15:11
Melos Quartet (score)
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:23
Melos Quartet (score)
II. Andante un poco moto
6:44
Melos Quartet (score)
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
11:36
Melos Quartet (score)
IV. Allegro assai
12:57
Kolisch Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
8:34
Kolisch Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
6:05
Kolisch Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
8:54
Kolisch Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
15:42
Guarneri Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
11:32
Guarneri Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
6:44
Guarneri Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
11:13
Guarneri Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
23:20
Gidon Kremer, Daniel Phillips, Kim Kashkashian, Yo-Yo Ma
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:39
Gidon Kremer, Daniel Phillips, Kim Kashkashian, Yo-Yo Ma
II. Andante un poco moto
7:20
Gidon Kremer, Daniel Phillips, Kim Kashkashian, Yo-Yo Ma
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:20
Gidon Kremer, Daniel Phillips, Kim Kashkashian, Yo-Yo Ma
IV. Allegro assai
20:49
Alban Berg Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:22
Alban Berg Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
7:00
Alban Berg Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:34
Alban Berg Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
16:00
New Orford String Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
12:29
New Orford String Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
7:44
New Orford String Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
11:06
New Orford String Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
45:13
Kodaly Quartet
10:00
Hungarian String Quartet
I. Allegro molto moderato
10:24
Hungarian String Quartet
II. Andante un poco moto
7:06
Hungarian String Quartet
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio. Allegretto
10:03
Hungarian String Quartet
IV. Allegro assai
From Kai Christiansen

Franz Schubert, 1797-1828

String Quartet No. 15 in G Major, Op. 161, D. 887, 1826

Franz SchubertFranz Schubert wrote chamber music all his short but prodigious life, writing the first of twenty string quartets when he was only fifteen years old. Given his life of only thirty-one years, it may seem incredible to speak of a "late" period, but Schubert's music went through a dramatic transformation around the time he turned twenty-four. In 1820, Schubert composed his famous Quartettsatz in C minor, a complete first movement for an otherwise uncompleted string quartet. Henceforth known as his String Quartet No. 12, the magnificent Quartettsatz ("string quartet movement or piece") inaugurates a period of new maturity featuring several cardinal aspects of Schubert's style that would dominate the remaining quartets in ever expanding power and scope. Chief among these traits is a dichotomous pairing of restless angst and lyrical sublimity. It is as if Schubert and his music became positively transfixed by the stark polarity between dark and light, an unresolved juxtaposition of agony and ecstasy. This is the essence of the Quartettsatz and the remaining three quartets that may be properly regarded as his late works. The ultimate work in this series of string chamber works and the final work of Schubert's life was the towering String Quintet in C Major, the most supreme incarnation of this very same trajectory. Just before it comes the String Quartet No. 15 in G Major, the epic quartet on the program tonight.

Schubert wrote his final string quartet during a period of ten days in 1826 around the same time that Beethoven finished his own late essays in the genre. Schubert, a long time admirer of Beethoven, would be a bereft torch bearer at Beethoven's funeral in 1827, just one and a half years before Schubert's own death in 1828. Despite this proximity in time and place as well as a shared heritage of Viennese classicism in which both men were eventually regarded as supreme masters, the late quartets of Schubert and Beethoven are remarkably dissimilar if not, in some ways, opposites. Like Beethoven, Schubert was in the midst of blazing his own trail in a fresh and significant evolution of quartet style. Unlike Beethoven, Schubert was cut short. Hence the tragically accurate inscription on Schubert's tomb, "The art of music here entombed a rich possession, but even far fairer hopes."

The String Quartet in G Major is chamber music on a massive scale. The first movement alone lasts between fifteen and twenty minutes depending on the tempo and whether repeats are honored. Within the first few measures, Schubert establishes his familiar dichotomy between light and dark as a G Major chord transforms simply, suddenly and significantly into G minor. This mercurial and fundamental battle between light and dark rages on until the very end of the quartet some fifty minutes later. Schubert's arresting introduction soon softens into floating light with a telltale signature: a quiet, fluttering tremolo of quick triplets punctuated by a germinal motif fragment in a dotted rhythm. With a steep rise in dynamics and the fully marshaled force of the ensemble, the introduction morphs into the primary thematic material that will course throughout the movement in continuous alteration with a second lyrical theme soon to come. In a unique approach to sonata form, Schubert seems to co-evolve both theme areas in successive waves as each interrupts the other while internally growing more elaborate. Far more "development" happens in the traditional areas of exposition and recapitulation than the literal development section itself, which is relatively brief by comparison. Instead, there is contrast, expansion and variation in an endless matrix of sudden contrasts in modality, texture, dynamics, rhythm and mood. It is not until the last few bars that the battle finally yields to a briefly stable victory for G Major.

The second movement Andante is the slow movement of similarly vast proportions and emotional intensity. A delicate elegiac theme features the cello with a somber, moderate cast in E minor that rises only briefly in its second reprise to a brief smile of temporary relief. Suddenly, a huge surge of dark passion interrupts the suave lament as if the first movement were rushing back complete with dotted rhythms, nervous tremolos and abrupt, stabbing gestures. Once again, Schubert is positively transfixed with two contrasting ideas that seem to recur more often and more directly than classical forms seem to encourage. But as in the first movement and throughout much of his oeuvre, Schubert never says the same thing twice. Each recurrence brings a change of instrumentation, texture, rhythm, key or modality, sometimes only as a subtle nuance. The casual listener finds repetition on the surface while the deeper listener discovers endless diversity exploiting gorgeous, resilient musical ideas in a constant state of transformation.

A much lighter and shorter Scherzo breaks the spell with a tensile agility that suggests Mendelssohn who, during the same year of 1826 would have been a teenager hard at work on his remarkable overture to a Midsummer Night's Dream. The nimble scherzo gives way to a supple trio, a sweet, swaying ländler that may well be the only untroubled section in the entire quartet. A sublime duet between cello and violin dances like a poignant dream lost so quickly in the ensuing tumult.

Schubert concludes his final string quartet with the perpetual motion of a sonata rondo in a typical 6/8 meter at a brisk clip, for the most part a high-spirited dance. Characteristically, the first several measures feature an unstable tonality flickering by the beat between major and minor and just as quickly, restless modulations to new keys. Many commentators have likened the finale to an opera buffa where Schubert's temperamental drama assumes a comedic cast in a kind of frantic parody of itself. The combination of reprise along with prominent developmental aspects crafts a hybrid of rondo and sonata forms first established by Haydn. The comparatively effervescent character of Schubert's conclusion is merely a pause in the seemingly endless flow of his mightier passions. From the last string quartet, Schubert moved on to the singular String Quintet, a musical thread we will resume in an upcoming concert this season at Kohl Mansion.

© Kai Christiansen Used by permission. All rights reserved.

Related Composers

Johann Hummel (1778-1837)
Friend/Colleague
Nationality: Austrian
Born: November 14, 1778, Pressburg (now Bratislava) Died: October 17, 1837, Weimar (age 58)