String Quartet No. 1 (Britten)
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String Quartet No. 1 in D major, Op. 25, by English composer Benjamin Britten, was written in the U.S. in 1941.


History

The quartet was commissioned by arts patron
Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge aka Liz Coolidge (30 October 1864 – 4 November 1953), born Elizabeth Penn Sprague, was an American pianist and patron of music, especially of chamber music. Biography Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge's father was a we ...
, while Britten was living in America. At the time, he and Peter Pears were staying as guests of the English piano duo Ethel Bartlett and Rae Robertson in Escondido near San Diego, California. It was the last important work of his American period. Britten remarked that three months to write it was "Short notice & a bit of a sweat, but I'll do it as the cash will be useful!" The fee was $400 (roughly equivalent to $6700 in 2017). The premiere performance was on 21 September 1941 at
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, in Los Angeles, with the composer present, by the Coolidge Quartet. Britten wrote afterwards to Mrs Coolidge that he "was delighted with the way that they had played my quartetreally first class, both in musicianship and technique". He had already intended to write a piece for the Griller Quartet, and they gave the UK premiere in 1943. The premiere recording was by the Galimir Quartet in 1951. In 1979, musicologist Peter Evans wrote that the quartet both had and had not secured a place in the repertory. It is unclear which of these two incompatible statements reflects Evans' opinion. It has been recorded by several distinguished quartets (see
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, below).


Analysis and reception

The quartet is in four movements: # ''Andante sostenutoAllegro vivo'' # ''Allegro con slancio'' # ''Andante calmo'' (in 5/4 time) # ''Molto vivace'' A typical performance takes about 26 minutes. The first and third movements, at about 10 minutes each, are much longer than the second and fourth, at about 3 minutes each. The sonata-form first movement contains alternating andante and allegro passages, the slow and fast music playing for similar durations. On 22 September 1941, Isabel Morse Jones, music critic for the '' Los Angeles Times'', reviewed the premiere. She wrote, "It is distinctly contemporary and the work starts in a wholly unique ethereality. Upper partials barely heard usher in the first subject most gently. Then a rhythm-cleverness changes the whole picture. Britten wanted to bring the music to consciousness mysteriously, as from another world. The idea was all right but the music was not effective". Nevertheless, she suggested that the slow third movement might be titled "In Memoriam for a Lost World", and said that the last movement was "a brilliant success". According to Britten's biographer Humphrey Carpenter, the tense and restless character of the quartet may reflect an emotional turmoil in the composer; or, perhaps, partly derive from his working conditionshe had had to shut himself in a tool shed and turn on a fan to drown out the sound of his hosts' piano practice. Musicologist Peter Evans analysed the structure of the quartet in detail. He saw resemblances to Beethoven, Bartók and Haydn in some of its features. He wrote, "the extremely subtle relationship between inherent characteristics of the material and its structural working-out showed Britten at twenty-seven to be a master of tonal architecture with scarcely a rival on the English scene". To Evans, Britten's use of D major is often, as here, associated with "a luminous harmony of gentle diatonic dissonance". Musicologist Roger Parker called the quartet "a significant milestone in Britten’s composing career", and, brushing aside what he called the "music-analytical Britten industry", also compared it with late Beethoven. Ben Hogwood summarised critical opinions on the quartet. "Critical reaction to the quartet was largely strong, and the work is held in good regard by authorities on the composer, despite acknowledgement of a few formal quirks and minor shortcomings." Like others, he saw resemblances to Beethoven.


Recordings

* 1951 Galimir Quartet, premiere recording Esoteric 78 rpm ES504; re-released (1966) on
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XID 5259 and (unknown date) on Counterpoint/Esoteric Records CPTS-5504 US * 1957 Paganini Quartet, Liberty SWL 15000 * 1965
Fidelio Quartet ''Fidelio'' (; ), originally titled ' (''Leonore, or The Triumph of Marital Love''), Op. 72, is Ludwig van Beethoven's only opera. The German libretto was originally prepared by Joseph Sonnleithner from the French of Jean-Nicolas Bouilly, with ...
,
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GSGC I4025 * 1972 Allegri Quartet, Decca LP SXL 6564 * 1978 Alberni Quartet, CRD Records CRD 1051 * 1986 Endellion Quartet, HMV E 2705021/31/41 * 1991 Britten Quartet,
Collins Classics Collins Classics is a record label which specialises in classical music. It was founded in 1989 as a musical subsidiary of HarperCollins Publishers and distributed through Pinnacle Entertainment (United Kingdom). Artists who recorded for the ...
11152 * 1998 Maggini Quartet, Naxos 8.553883 * 2005
Belcea Quartet The Belcea Quartet is a string quartet, formed in 1994, under the leadership of violinist Corina Belcea. History The quartet was formed while its members were studying at the Royal College of Music in London. Whilst there, they were coached by t ...
EMI Classics CD 7243 5 57968 2 0 * 2013 Takács Quartet,
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CD CDA68004 * 2018 -- Doric Quartet, Chandos 20124


Notes


References


External links

* . A musicological lecture by Roger Parker followed by a performance by the
Badke Quartet The Badke Quartet is a British string quartet. Founded in 2002 at London's Royal Academy of Music, it regularly performs at leading venues throughout the UK, Ireland and the rest of Europe. In 2014, the quartet was appointed quartet in residence ...
, at Gresham College, London in 2013 * . A musicological lecture in 2015 by Bruce Adolphe at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, including musical performances by the Amphion Quartet {{Authority control 1941 compositions
1941 Events Below, the events of World War II have the "WWII" prefix. January * January–August – 10,072 men, women and children with mental and physical disabilities are asphyxiated with carbon monoxide in a gas chamber, at Hadamar Eu ...
String quartet Britten 1