String Quartet (Bruckner) Explained

String Quartet
Composer:Anton Bruckner
Catalogue:WAB 111
Movements:4

The String Quartet in C minor WAB 111, was composed by Anton Bruckner's in 1862 during his tuition by Otto Kitzler.

History

In the spring of 1862, during his tuition by Otto Kitzler, Bruckner composed two scherzi for string quartet in F major and G minor. Thereafter, between 28 July and 7 August 1862, he composed the String Quartet in C minor, as a preliminary to exercises in orchestration. The manuscript of the Quartet was found on pp. 165–196 of the Kitzler-Studienbuch.[1]

On reviewing Bruckner's work one week later (15 August 1862), Kitzler was perhaps dissatisfied with Bruckner's unconventionality of the first rondo. He therefore suggested that a Rondo German: in größerer Form [1] and in a more traditional rondo-sonata form would have benefited the piece.[2] The 40-bars longer piece, which has the same key, metre and formal structure as the first Rondo, can, therefore, be regarded as an alternative to the first Rondo.[3] The Quartet was not issued during Bruckner's life, since it concerned only a sample of what he was capable of during his period of study with Kitzler.[1] Bruckner did not bequeath a score of the quartet as he did for the later Four Orchestral Pieces. The Kitzler-Studienbuch wound up in the possession of Bruckner's friend Josef Schalk in Munich, where the Quartet was discovered in 1950 by the Koeckert Quartet. The Koeckert Quartet premiered the Quartet on 15 February 1951 in a broadcast of the Rundfunk im amerikanischen Sektor, and performed it on 8 March 1951 in a concert in Hamburg.[1] There are recordings of the 1951 premiere in the broadcasting archives of the RIAS, its successor the Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, and the Bavarian and Norddeutsche Rundfunk.[4] A recording from the archive of the NDR is available in the Bruckner Archive.[5]

Edition

The String Quartet was edited by Nowak in Band XIII/1 of the German: Gesamtausgabe in 1955.

Setting

The piece is a conventional string quartet in the usual four movements:

  1. Allegro moderato, C minor, common time
  2. Andante, A-flat major, 3/4, with Minore section in A-flat minor
  3. Scherzo, Presto G major, 3/4, Trio
  4. Rondo, Schnell, C minor, 2/4

Duration: 19 to 24 minutes.

Unlike his later works, Bruckner gave few indications as to phrasing, while dynamics appear only at a few key points. Rudolf Koeckert allowed Leopold Nowak to put his group's phrasing and dynamics into the Gesamtausgabe parts. However, the Gesamtausgabe score contains only those markings in Bruckner's hand. The String Quartet is a settlement with classical and early romantic examples. The from the beginning polyphonic imprint refers back to Bruckner's earlier exercises.[6]

The first movement, in traditional sonata form, is with audacious modulations in the development.[6] The exposition is marked for repeat; the only other Bruckner work with such a repeat is the Symphony in F minor.[7]
The Andante, in three parts (ABA) with modified reprise,[6] mirrors Beethoven's choice of key for a slow movement after a C minor Allegro, but having the central section in the parallel minor is something Bruckner never does again.[8]
The Trio of the Scherzo is in Ländler form.[6] Derek Watson finds that the Trio "has a Schubertian, freshly bucolic charm."[8]
The Rondo has virtuoso accents.[6] The B theme appears first in E-flat major and later in C major, and the last turn of the A theme is highly ornamented. This rondo has a curious feature, in that in Part 6, the B theme from Part 2 and the C theme from Part 4 are present together.[9]

One can already see connections to later Bruckner works in the key (C minor), in several harmonic phrases and theme patterns, as well as the use of Ländler motives.[6]

Selected discography

There are about 10 recordings of the String Quartet.

The live-performance by the Koeckert Quartet (9 March 1951) from the archive of the NDR is released on CD 2 of Music from the Archives, Volume 1, SOMM recordings ARIADNE 5025-2, 15 March 2024.

Excellent recordings are according to Hans Roelofs i.a. those by the Koeckert Quartett (1974), L'Archibudelli, the Fine Arts Quartet and the Zehetmair Streichquartett. Where the Koeckert Quartet actually disregarded the few dynamics markings Bruckner gave,[10] the Fine Arts Quartet obeys Bruckner's markings but mostly ignores Koeckert's.

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. C. van Zwol, pp. 682-683
  2. W. Carragan, p.11
  3. http://bruckner.webs.com/chamber.html Bruckner Chamber Work Versions by Davis Griegel
  4. http://www.abruckner.com/vocal_instrumental_music/php/index.php@pag=500.htm Critical discography by Hans Roelofs
  5. https://www.abruckner.com/brucknerarchive/ The Bruckner Archive
  6. U. Harten, p. 406
  7. B. Korstvedt, p. 176
  8. D. Watson, p. 73
  9. W. Carragan, p. 10
  10. L. Nowak, Band XIII/1 of the Gesamtausgabe