Antonín Dvořák. String Quartet No. 10 in E-flat major, Op. 51. Edited by Hartmut Schick. Bärenreiter-Verlag Urtext. Kassel and Prague: Bärenreiter, 2019. Study Score. xi, 50 pp. € 12.95 - Antonín Dvořák. Piano Quartet in D Major, Op. 23. Edited by Robin Tait. Preface by David Beveridge. Bärenreiter-Verlag Urtext. Kassel and Prague: Bärenreiter, 2017. Piano Score. xiii, 73 pp. € 24.95 - Antonín Dvořák. Serenade for Wind Instruments, Violoncello and Double Bass, Op. 44. Edited by Robin Tait. Preface by David Beveridge. Bärenreiter-Verlag Urtext. Kassel and Prague: Bärenreiter, 2016. Score. xiii, 70 pp. € 27.95

Author(s):  
Marie Sumner Lott
2018 ◽  
Vol 59 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 301-308
Author(s):  
David Vondráček

Abstract Dohnányi's Second Piano Quintet in E-flat minor was written in 1914 and is less well-known than his first one dating from 1895. The composer has been called a traditionalist, so it is worth examining how tradition appears in this work. The outer movements of the three-movement-form are both elegiac and weighty. The beginning bears the key signature of E-flat major instead of minor, but the keys are changing rapidly as the piece progresses. This is reminiscent of Franz Schubert or of Antonín Dvořák, for instance in his Piano Quartet (op. 87) inspired by Brahms. The third movement's opening is a homage to Beethoven's late String Quartet in A Minor (op. 132). While the latter works on a sub-thematic level, Dohnányi presents an elaborated theme in fugal technique, which in 1914 was a more conservative approach than Beethoven's in 1825. For Dohnányi, the symmetric structures are not a way out of traditional tonality (unlike for Bartók, who also frequently used symmetries), but rather are a way of extending it. The formal concept is no less interesting. The recapitulation of the first movement's material within the third is evocative of the double-function form used by Franz Liszt. While Liszt conflated the traditional multi-movement form into a new one-movement form, Dohnányi – so to speak – concealed the characteristics of the new one-movement form inside a traditional three-movement form. Thus, one could ask if the accusations against Dohnányi for being a traditionalist are justified. Perhaps instead we should reconsider how traditionalism and modernity are situated in our own set of aesthetic values.


1983 ◽  
Vol 124 (1690) ◽  
pp. 755
Author(s):  
John Tyrrell ◽  
Suk ◽  
Suk Quartet ◽  
Stepan
Keyword(s):  

1963 ◽  
Vol 104 (1450) ◽  
pp. 892
Author(s):  
Peter J. Pirie ◽  
Christopher Le Fleming ◽  
Kenneth Leighton ◽  
Thea Musgrave ◽  
Alan Rawsthorne
Keyword(s):  

Tempo ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 58 (230) ◽  
pp. 56-56
Author(s):  
Paul Conway

Judith Weir's Tiger under the Table, premièred by the London Sinfonietta under Thomas Adès in March 2003, is a reference to an exceptional energy in the lower registers, exemplified by an angry bassoon and twanging double bass. The gruff and dark-hued emphasis on the bass line in the opening section is in stark contrast to the typically bright and shiny ‘Judith Weir sound’ as exemplified by Moon and Star and the Piano Concerto, for example. The feeling of an underground upheaval recalls, rather, the ominous stringed-instrument slapping from the fifth movement of Weir's We Are Shadows. A heavenly string quartet offers repose: as in Vaughan Williams's Tallis Fantasia, it operates on a different plane from the rest of the ensemble. There ensues a quick parade of trios and quartets made up of unlikely combinations, including an ill-fated attempt to form a piano concerto. Finally, all 14 players join together and the composer truly becomes herself again in a witty and jazzy coda of prodigious invention. The pointillism here is engagingly full of heart. Glissandi threaten to destabilie the structure, but the work ends optimistically, with a warm unison.


2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 369-423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Hedges Brown

Schumann's 1842 chamber music exemplifies a common theme in his critical writings, that to sustain a notable inherited tradition composers must not merely imitate the past but reinvent it anew. Yet Schumann's innovative practices have not been sufficiently acknowledged, partly because his instrumental repertory seemed conservative to critics of Schumann's day and beyond, especially when compared to his earlier experimental piano works and songs. This essay offers a revisionist perspective by exploring three chamber movements that recast sonata procedure in one of two complementary ways: either the tonic key monopolizes the exposition (as in the first movement of the Piano Quartet in E♭ major, op. 47), or a modulating main theme undercuts a definitive presence of the tonic key at the outset (as in the first movement of the String Quartet in A major, op. 41, no. 3, and the finale of the String Quartet in A minor, op. 41, no. 1). Viewed against conventional sonata practice, these chamber movements appear puzzling, perhaps even incoherent or awkward, since they thwart the tonal contrast of keys so characteristic of the form. Yet these unusual openings, and the compelling if surprising ramifications that they prompt, signal not compositional weakness but rather an effort to reinterpret the form as a way of strengthening its expressive power. My analyses also draw on other perspectives to illuminate these sonata forms. All three movements adopt a striking thematic idea or formal ploy that evokes a specific Beethovenian precedent; yet each movement also highlights Schumann’s creative distance from his predecessor by departing in notable ways from the conjured model. Aspects of Schumann’s sketches, especially those concerning changes made during the compositional process, also illuminate relevant analytical points. Finally, in the analysis of the finale of the A-minor quartet, I consider how Schumann’s evocation of Hungarian Gypsy music may be not merely incidental to but supportive of his reimagined sonata form. Ultimately, the perspectives offered here easily accommodate—even celebrate—Schumann’s idiosyncratic approach to sonata form. They also demonstrate that Schumann’s earlier experimental tendencies did not contradict his efforts in the early 1840s to further advance his inherited classical past.


Tempo ◽  
1998 ◽  
pp. 12-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Hall

By alternating his Nine Movements for String Quartet with his Nine Settings of Paul Celan (for soprano, two clarinets, viola, cello and double bass) to produce Pulse Shadows, Harrison Birtwistle created not only his longest work for the concert hall but also his most moving and affirmative.


1975 ◽  
Vol 116 (1591) ◽  
pp. 798
Author(s):  
G. W. Hopkins ◽  
Faure ◽  
Guarneri Quartet ◽  
Rubinstein
Keyword(s):  

Tempo ◽  
1978 ◽  
pp. 14-23
Author(s):  
David Drew

In 1960, at the age of 17, Gruber wrote the first two pieces which he is still prepared to acknowledge: the Suite for 2 pianos, wind instruments, and percussion, and the Mass for mixed chorus, two trumpets, cor anglais, double bass and percussion. It is worth considering what that acknowledgement implies, for the works themselves clearly do not measure up to the high technical standards Gruber sets himself today, or even to those which he achieved in the Concerto for Orchestra sketched that same year.


New Sound ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 197-216
Author(s):  
Tijana Ilišević

The objective of this work is the discovery and analysis of teleological strategies, i.e. the ways in which music that is not tonal-oriented finds points of orientation, how it is structured around them and directed towards them as formal supports. A modernist composition Octandre by Edgar Varèse which is composed of seven wind instruments and double-bass will serve as an analytical sample. An important element of the composition is the use of sound masses as basic building units, whose expressive meaning is within the general character of the sound, and not in the concrete melodic content. Seemingly, the relevance of individual pitches is minimized, which could indicate the possible statics and absence of goal-oriented movement. However, the analysis has discovered an orientation towards certain goals, as well as the crucial importance of parameters of pitches during the process of their realisation. By tracking these processes, as well as by analyzing the sets from which the sound masses of the work are built, it will be concluded that the analyzed work rests upon advisedly elaborated compositional strategies that make its course targeted.


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