String Quartet No. 15 (Beethoven)

The String Quartet No. 15 in A minor, Op. 132, by Ludwig van Beethoven, was written in 1825, given its public premiere on November 6 of that year by the Schuppanzigh Quartet and was dedicated to Count Nikolai Galitzin, as were Opp. 127 and 130. The number traditionally assigned to it is based on the order of its publication; it is actually the thirteenth quartet in order of composition.

String Quartet
No. 15
Late string quartet by Ludwig van Beethoven
Portrait of Ludwig van Beethoven by Johann Stephan Decker, 1824
KeyA minor
OpusOp. 132
Composed1825
DedicationNikolai Galitzin
Durationc. 45 min
MovementsFive
Premiere
Date6 November 1825 (1825-11-06)
PerformersSchuppanzigh Quartet

Music

The five movements of the quartet are:

  1. Assai sostenuto – Allegro (A minor)
  2. Allegro ma non tanto (A major)
  3. "Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der Lydischen Tonart". Molto adagio – Andante (F Lydian)
  4. Alla marcia, assai vivace (attacca) (A major)
  5. Allegro appassionato (A minor – A major)

The performance of the work takes around 45 minutes.

I. Assai sostenuto – Allegro

The slow introduction to the first movement, like that of the thirteenth quartet, is based on a motif that recurs throughout the late quartets and in the Große Fuge as well: the second tetrachord of the harmonic minor scale. The movement is in a modified sonata form which involves three full rotations of the expositional primary and secondary thematic material, each with a different tonal plan, in contrast to the usual sonata form which only cycles fully through this material twice (for the exposition and recapitulation).

The first expositional rotation begins in the tonic and moves down a third to VI (F major) for the second key area (m. 48), while the second – following a developmental episode – is almost a direct transposition that begins in E minor (m. 103) and moves similarly down a third to C major. The final abbreviated rotation (m. 193) remains in the tonic throughout, followed by a coda (m. 232) featuring a dominant pedal point.

The movement's unusual structure has invited a variety of analytical interpretations. Composer Roger Sessions describes the form as more of a triple exposition than a normal sonata form,[1] and the second rotation could be interpreted as a simulation of the expositional repeat seen in many classical sonata form expositions, with the added interest of transposition. Conversely, other analysts have interpreted the second rotation as the onset of the recapitulation or as a "double recapitulation effect" rather than as an expositional repeat, with Hepokoski and Darcy describing it as a "tonally 'wrong' recapitulatory rotation followed by a notably varied, 'right' one in the tonic".[2] and Joseph Kerman referring, albeit with reservations, to an "E-minor recapitulation" and an "A-minor recapitulation".[3]

Charles Rosen, on the other hand, considered this structure to be governed, as all of Beethoven's works, by the principle of sonata resolution, pointing to Haydn's 75th and 89th symphonies as precedents. For Rosen, the exposition comprises the A minor and F major sections; the brief developmental episode is a true development; and the middle section that directly transposes the exposition is a harmonic development (in the dominant and mediant keys, on the sharp side of the tonic) while acting thematically as a recapitulation. This allows the final section to act as a harmonic recapitulation (as it remains in the tonic throughout), while incorporating thematic development.[4]

II. Allegro ma non tanto

The second movement is a minuet with trio, rather than the scherzo with repeated trio that Beethoven used most often in his works starting with his second symphony. The trio evokes a musette with its melodies over sustained tonic (here, A) tones. It partly reuses Beethoven's Allemande WoO 81.

To begin this movement (Listen), Beethoven exposes the fourth in a three-note gesture (G–A–C) four times, with the violins and viola in unison and the cello an octave below. In m. 5, this motive is combined with an inverted variation (outlining a descending fifth) in mixed rhythm.

Opening of the second movement of Beethoven's String Quartet in A-Minor Op. 132

Philip Radcliffe (1965, p. 114) says that the three-note gesture shares with the opening of the first movement “the unusual feature of beginning on the leading note of the scale.”[5] Daniel Chua (1995, p. 113) points out that this creates “rhythmic ambivalence”, especially when the two motives combine in bar 5: “In this way, as the two patterns interlock a gentle tension is induced by the differing rhythmic currents and admits the possibility of two contradictory metrical interpretations.”[6][7]

III. Molto adagio – Andante

At about 15 to 20 minutes in duration, the third movement is the longest of the quartet. Formally described, it alternates slow sections in a modal F with faster sections, "Neue Kraft fühlend" ("feeling new strength"), in D. The slow sections each have two elements, (1) a passage reminiscent of the opening of the first movement in which the instruments overlap each other with a brief motive; (2) a chorale, the actual song. In the three instances of the slow section, the overlapping motives become increasingly complex rhythmically, while the chorale is pared down, and the two elements become increasingly integrated. There is a characteristic intensification of the head-motif toward the end of the movement.

Beethoven wrote this piece after recovering from a serious illness which he had feared was fatal because he had been afflicted with intestinal disorder during the entire winter of 1824–5. He thus headed the movement with the words, "Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der lydischen Tonart" ("Holy song of thanksgiving of a convalescent to the Deity, in the Lydian mode").

IV. Alla marcia, assai vivace

This brief (2-minute) march in A major leads directly into the rondo-finale through a recitative-like passage.

V. Allegro appassionato

The movement is in sonata rondo form (A B A C A B A).

Beethoven's sketches show that this theme was originally meant for an instrumental conclusion to the Ninth Symphony, but was abandoned for the now famous choral ending. The movement ends with a coda in A major.

Influence

Some credit this quartet as T. S. Eliot's impetus to write the Four Quartets; certainly he was recorded in a letter to Stephen Spender as having a copy of the A-minor quartet on the gramophone: 'I find it quite inexhaustible to study. There is a sort of heavenly or at least more than human gaiety about some of his later things which one imagines might come to oneself as the fruit of reconciliation and relief after immense suffering; I should like to get something of that into verse before I die.'[8]

Aldous Huxley in his novel Point Counter Point makes extended reference and description of this quartet in the late chapter concerning the death/suicide of the character Maurice Spandrell.

gollark: ~~__***OVERLY FORMATTED MESSAGE***__~~
gollark: __TEST__
gollark: ~~TEST~~
gollark: -TEST-
gollark: _TEST_

See also

  • Late String Quartets (Beethoven)

References

  1. "SESSIONS: String Quintet / String Quartet No. 1 / Canons (to the memory of Igor Stravinsky)". www.naxos.com.
  2. Hepokoski, James and Warren Darcy. (2006) Elements of Sonata Theory: Norms, Types and Deformations in the Late Eighteenth-Century Sonata. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 280.
  3. Kerman, Joseph. (1967) The Beethoven Quartets. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, p. 247.
  4. Rosen, Charles (1988). Sonata Forms (2nd ed.). W. W. Norton and Company. p. 355. ISBN 0-393-30219-9.
  5. Radcliffe, P. (1965) Beethoven's String Quartets. London, Hutchinson University Library.
  6. Chua, D. (1995), The "Galitzin" Quartets of Beethoven. Princeton university Press.
  7. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UYnVnrZoB6o
  8. Mitchell, Katie (November 18, 2005). "A meeting of minds". the Guardian.

Further reading

  • Sessions, Roger. The Musical Experience of Composer, Performer, Listener. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1958. Paperback.
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