String Quartets (Ligeti)

The Hungarian composer György Ligeti published three string quartets throughout his life: two string quartets proper (1953–54, 1968) and a student piece from 1950 published towards the end of Ligeti's life. The first two string quartets proper represent both his early period, inspired by Béla Bartók, and middle period, which was largely micropolyphonic.[1][2]

In 2012, sketches and notes for his projected String Quartets Nos. 3 and 4 were discovered by Bianca Ţiplea Temeș at the Paul Sacher Stiftung, and they would represent Ligeti's late period.

Andante and Allegretto

These two movements were written for the graduation exam at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, with a stylistic uncertainty.[1] The piece was premiered by the Arditti Quartet in 1994 at the Salzburg Festival.[3] The movements are about 13 minutes in total duration.

  1. Andante cantabile
  2. Allegretto poco capriccioso

String Quartet No. 1 (Métamorphoses nocturnes)

György Ligeti's String Quartet No. 1, titled Métamorphoses nocturnes, was composed in 1953–54. It is thus representative of what the composer himself used to call "the prehistoric Ligeti", referring to the works he wrote before leaving Hungary in 1956.[4] Ligeti was heavily inspired to write this quartet by Bartók's third and fourth quartets, so much so that it was even called "Bartók's seventh string quartet" by fellow Hungarian composer György Kurtág.[2] Ligeti knew of these works only from their scores, performances of them being banned under communist regimes at the time.[5]

The quartet is approximately 21 minutes in duration, and was premiered at the Vienna Musikverein on 8 May 1958 by the Ramor Quartet,[6] an ensemble that had also fled into exile. The work is written in one continuous movement, which can be divided into seventeen contrasting sections:[4]

  1. Allegro grazioso
  2. Vivace, capriccioso
  3. A tempo
  4. Adagio, mesto
  5. Presto – Prestissimo
  6. Molto sostenuto – Andante tranquillo
  7. Più mosso
  8. Tempo di Valse, moderato, con eleganza, un poco capriccioso
  9. Subito prestissimo
  10. Subito: molto sostenuto
  11. Allegretto, un poco gioviale
  12. Allarg. Poco più mosso
  13. Subito allegro con moto, string. poco a poco sin al prestissimo
  14. Prestissimo
  15. Allegro comodo, gioviale
  16. Sostenuto, accelerando – Ad libitum, senza misura
  17. Lento

String Quartet No. 2

György Ligeti's String Quartet No. 2 is a string quartet that was composed between February and August 1968.[7] It is approximately 21 minutes in duration. It is dedicated to the LaSalle Quartet who gave its first performance in Baden-Baden on the 14 December 1969.

The five movements differ widely from each other in their types of motion. In the first, the structure is largely broken up, as in Aventures. In the second, everything is reduced to very slow motion, and the music seems to be coming from a distance, with great lyricism. The pizzicato third movement is another of Ligeti's machine-like studies, hard and mechanical, whereby the parts playing repeated notes creates a "granulated" continuum. In the fourth, which is fast and threatening, everything that happened before is crammed together. Lastly, in strong contrast, the fifth movement spreads itself out. In each movement, the same basic configurations return, but each time their coloring or viewpoint is different, so that the overall form only really emerges when one listens to all five movements in context.[8]

The quartet consists of five movements:

  1. Allegro nervoso
  2. Sostenuto, molto calmo
  3. Come un meccanismo di precisione
  4. Presto furioso, brutale, tumultuoso
  5. Allegro con delicatezza

String Quartets Nos. 3 and 4

In 2012, musicologist Bianca Ţiplea Temeș discovered sketches and notes for his projected String Quartets Nos. 3 and 4 were discovered at the Paul Sacher Stiftung.

The third quartet was commissioned by the Festival d'automne in Paris and was eventually planned to be a single movement work, like the first string quartet, but was also considered to be in six or three movements, with the three lasting about 12' + 3' + 6' minutes in total. The piece would be dedicated to the Arditti Quartet, entirely microtonal, inspired by the hyperchromaticism of Gesualdo, and inspired by melodic ideas from Burma, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Java, Bali, and Cameroon. It's also suggested that the entire quartet would be tuned in scordaturas based on harmonic partials, akin to the violin and viola in Ligeti's Violin Concerto.

The fourth quartet would be dedicated to the Kronos Quartet, and be inspired by melodic ideas from Burma, Cameroon, Romania and Hungary. The quartet was projected to have a pizzicato movement, uneven tremolo, and the harmony would also be very chromatic, but also spectral and with complex polyrhythms.[9][2]

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gollark: It might be slower and it's definitely bigger and more complex.
gollark: Sort of. Not really.
gollark: You put your bootloader there.
gollark: An EFI system partition is where it looks for EFI files to boot.

References

  1. Ţiplea Temeș, Bianca. "Ligeti's String Quartet Music: From the Published Works to the New Discoveries at the Paul Sacher Foundation" (PDF).
  2. Ţiplea Temeș, Bianca. "Tracking Down Ligeti's Unfinished Third and Fourth String Quartets" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 November 2016.
  3. "Andante und Allegretto". schott-music.com.
  4. Griffiths, Paul (2003). String Quartets Nos 1 & 2 – Ramifications etc (CD liner). György Ligeti. Deutsche Grammophon. 474327-2.
  5. Ligeti, György (1996). György Ligeti Edition Vol. 1 – String Quartets and Duets (CD liner). György Ligeti. Sony Classical. SK62306.
  6. "String Quartet No. 1 ("Métamorphoses nocturnes")". AllMusic. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  7. Steinitz, Richard (2003). György Ligeti: Music of the Imagination. Boston: Northeastern University Press. p. 167. ISBN 1-55553-551-8.
  8. Stephen Plaistow, in the liner notes to the Deutsche Grammophon recording 423 244–2 of Ligeti’s Chamber Concerto, Ramifications, String Quartet No. 2, Aventures, and Lux aeterna, p. 3.
  9. "Mitteilungen der Paul Sacher Stiftung, Nr. 25, April 2012". paul-sacher-stiftung.ch. Archived from the original on 17 November 2016.
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