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Piano Quartet (Schumann)

The Piano Quartet in E major, Op. 47, was composed by Robert Schumann in 1842 for piano, violin, viola and cello. Written during a productive period in which he produced several large-scale chamber music works, it has been described as the "creative double" of his Piano Quintet, finished weeks earlier. Though dedicated to the Russian cellist Mathieu Wielhorsky, it was written with Schumann's wife Clara in mind, who would be the pianist at the premiere on 8 December 1844 in Leipzig.

Piano Quartet
by Robert Schumann
Title page of the first edition (1845), autographed by the composer
KeyE major
Opus47
Composed1842 (1842)
DedicationMathieu Wielhorsky
Published1845 (1845)
Durationc. 27 minutes
Movementsfour
Scoring
  • piano
  • violin
  • viola
  • cello
Premiere
Date8 December 1844
LocationLeipzig
Performers

The work consists of four movements. The first movement is in sonata form and begins with a hymn-like introduction that leads to a more figural section. The second movement, a scherzo, features a quick staccato figure that moves around a G minor scale, with two contrasting trio sections. The third movement (Andante cantabile) has been called the highlight of the work, with one of the most beautiful cello themes of the Romantic period. The finale includes contrapunctal writing and makes many references to the preceding movements.

At the premiere, the Piano Quartet was well received. Today, it is recognized as the culmination of virtually all previous exploration of the piano quartet as a genre up to that time, forming the foundations for later composers to build on.

Background Edit

 
Litograph of Schumann, 1839

The Piano Quartet in E major is preceded by a Piano Quartet in C minor, WoO E1, that Schumann composed in 1829, near the end of his first year of study in Leipzig. Possibly inspired by Mozart's Piano Quartet in G minor[1] and clearly influenced by Schubert's Piano Trio No. 2,[2] it was Schumann's most notable accomplishment to that date,[3] and a "remarkably polished work for someone who was as yet without formal training in composition".[2] Nonetheless, the Piano Quartet in C minor remained unpublished until 1979.[4]

Schumann would not compose any major chamber music until 1842, in which he produced several large-scale works for varying instrumentation. The first were his three String Quartets, Op. 41, which were completed by July, followed by the Piano Quintet, Op. 44 that was written from September to October. The Piano Quartet was sketched from 24 to 30 October, and written out in a fair copy between 7 and 26 November; the inscription "Leipzig, 26 November 1842" appears at the end of the manuscript.[5] After the quartet, he wrote the Fantasiestücke for piano trio, Op. 88 in December, and the Andante and Variations for two pianos, French horn and two cellos, Op. 46 between January and February 1843.[6]

 
Clara Wieck, 1840

Like the Piano Quintet, the Piano Quartet was written with his wife Clara in mind, though it was dedicated to Count Mathieu Wielhorsky, a Russian cellist and impresario.[7] A private performance of the work took place on 5 April 1843 at the Schumanns' home in Leipzig, with Clara at the piano, who described the quartet in her diary as a "beautiful work, so youthful and fresh, as if it were his first".[7] After making several revisions, on 24 August 1843 Schumann offered the work to the publisher Friedrich Whistling [de] and received a fee of 100 thaler. After several delays due to the Schumanns' tour of Russia in 1844, where the work was performed at a private recital, it was published in May 1845.[8] The manuscript is today held at the Berlin State Library, while the initial sketches have been lost.[9]

The premiere took place on 8 December 1844 at the Gewandhaus in Leipzig with Clara Schumann (piano), Ferdinand David (violin), Niels Gade (viola), and Franz Karl Wittmann (cello),[10] as part of a farewell concert for the Schumanns, who were leaving Leipzig for Dresden.[11][8]

Relationship to the Piano Quintet Edit

According to Schumann scholar John Daverio, the Piano Quartet can be interpreted as the "creative double" to the Piano Quintet, also in E major, and bringing together the piano with a complement of strings.[12] Though both displaying the "extroverted, exuberant side of the composer's creative genius", he did not consider them twins, as the absence of one violin in the Piano Quartet makes for a more intimate and individual sound, with a neo-classic tone not felt in the Quintet.[13]

Compared to the far more common piano trio, the addition of a viola in the piano quartet adds density to the texture of the ensemble's middle range, that may result in sharp contrasts between the piano and the strings.[14] This effect is even more pronounced when another violin is added: in the Piano Quintet, the piano and strings confront each other as distinct musical forces, the strings often presenting a concerto-like accompaniment to the piano. In contrast, the Piano Quartet emphasizes a chamber texture, in which the instruments permeate to form an unified ensemble. This is particularly evident in the slow movement.[5]

Form Edit

External audio
Performed by Menahem Pressler and the Emerson String Quartet
  I. Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo
  II. Scherzo: Molto vivace
  III. Andante cantabile
  IV. Finale: Vivace

The piece is in four movements, with the usual order of the internal movements reversed:

  1. Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo
  2. Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II
  3. Andante cantabile
  4. Finale: Vivace

A performance takes around 27 minutes.

Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo Edit

The brief introduction of the first movement (Sostenuto assai) resembles a hymn with four- and five-part harmony, all strings using double stoppings to achieve a chordal texture.[15] It leads to a more figural and abstract Allegro ma non troppo (mm. 13f.) that bears resemblance in its tone to Beethoven's "Harp" Quartet and Archduke Trio.[13] Three striking chords lead to a held dominant seventh, the right hand of the piano then presenting the first subject:[16]

 

The second subject group begins abruptly in the dominant G minor, following a full close in the tonic, producing a "startling, though, temporary disruption of the harmonic rhythm":[16]

 

A transient return to the Sostenuto (mm. 125f.) leads to another Allegro section (mm. 136f.) in which the themes are developed. The coda, marked Più agitato (mm. 320f.) concludes the movement.[17]

Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II Edit

Although the scherzo is marked Molto vivace, it is not exuberant in a manner similar to Mendelssohn; a "slightly sinister undercurrent" is said to emerge throughout the movement.[18] According to musicologist Basil Smallman, it hints at the "aura of fantasy" found in various parts of Schumann's Kreisleriana, and in his setting of Heinrich Heine's "Es leuchtet meine Liebe".[16]

The scherzo features a quick staccato figure moving up and down a G minor scale:[19]

 

There are two contrasting trios in related keys.[18] The first trio arises out of the same impulse as the scherzo's subject:[20]

 

The second trio has been described as "thoroughly Schumannesque", featuring a series of sustained, syncopated chords:[20]

 

Andante cantabile Edit

The Andante cantabile is a lyric song-like movement full of romanticism.[19] According to musicologist Karl Böhmer, it is the highlight of the work, featuring one of the most beautiful cello themes of the Romantic period.[21] Music writer James Keller has called it one of Schumann's most "sublime" melodies, "perfect in its balance, soulfulness, and apparent simplicity", remarking that it constitutes "one of the magical Schumann moments in which the entire universe seems to hold its breath".[18] The main theme unfolds in a "rhapsodic" manner through five variations, interjected with a chorale episode in G major, and concluding with a coda.[22]

Structure of the third movement[22]
Section Excerpt Audio
A Theme Cello
Score
 
Var. I Quasi-canon: violin & cello
Score
 
Var. II Duo: piano & viola
Score
 
B Chorale episode
Score
 
A' Var. III Duo: viola & violin
Score
 
Var. IV Quasi-canon: violin & viola
Score
 
Var. V Cello
Coda Finale prefigured
Score
 

In the coda, a three-note figure is introduced, and subjected to a spiraling series of melodic and harmonic transpositions. Daverio counted these final 14 measures among the "most evocative passages in all of Schumann's chamber music", conjuring up a "psychological state in which time and space seem to have been abrogated".[23] In an unusual application of a scordatura, the cello tunes the bottom C down to a B so that it can act as a pedal note.[13] Smallman called this an "ingenious piece of scoring, but not likely to win much favour with the participating performer".[24]

This movement inspired Brahms in his Piano Quartet in C minor, where the slow movement is also opened with a cello solo of similar style.[13]

Finale: Vivace Edit

The finale, constructed partly on fugal and partly on sonata lines, opens with the three-note figure from the coda of the preceding movement:[13][24]

 

Exposition and development are followed by a recapitulation and elaboration of the earlier development. The movement makes many references to the preceding movements: the beginning of the second group recalls a syncopated motif from the slow movement (mm. 31f.), the development references the slow movement's coda, and the "digressive arabesque" in A major in the recapitulation recalls the scherzo's first trio.[13]

Reception and legacy Edit

The premiere was successful, a critic for the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung calling the Piano Quartet "a piece full of spirit and vitality which, especially in the two inside movements, was most lovely and appealing, uniting a wealth of beautiful musical ideas with soaring flights of imagination", adding that "it will surely be received with great applause everywhere, as it was here".[8]

Smallman noted that the Piano Quartet was never accorded the same recognition as the Piano Quintet, largely because its principal themes are less immediately attractive. However, he called it "in many ways a more powerful work and, with its wealth of contrapuntal writing, more cogently constructed". He recognized both works as the culmination of virtually all previous exploration of their respective genres, forming the foundations for later composers to build on.[25] For at least a century after Schumann's works for piano and strings, works for similar ensembles increased in significance in chamber music. Schumann established a romantic model that many composers were tempted to emulate, particularly those composers influenced by Austro-German ideals such as Brahms and Dvořák; this continuation can be traced till at least the time of Schoenberg and Hindemith.[26]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Chernaik 2018, Chapter 1.
  2. ^ a b Daverio 1997, p. 51.
  3. ^ Jensen 2011, p. 24.
  4. ^ Krebs 1999, p. 263.
  5. ^ a b Leisinger 2006, p. IV.
  6. ^ Jensen 2011, p. 199.
  7. ^ a b Keller 2011, pp. 423.
  8. ^ a b c Leisinger 2006, p. V.
  9. ^ "Robert Schumann: Klavierquartett Es-Dur op. 47". Brahms-Institut (in German). Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  10. ^ Waldersee, Paul von (1882). Sammlung musikalischer Vorträge. Band 4 (in German). Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel. p. 36.
  11. ^ Geck 2013, p. 178.
  12. ^ Daverio 1997, p. 259.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Daverio 1997, p. 260.
  14. ^ Keller 2011, pp. 423–424.
  15. ^ Smallman 1994, p. 47.
  16. ^ a b c Smallman 1994, p. 48.
  17. ^ Murray 2015, p. 361.
  18. ^ a b c Keller 2011, p. 424.
  19. ^ a b Chernaik 2018, Chapter 11.
  20. ^ a b Donat 2000, p. 2.
  21. ^ Böhmer, Karl. "Robert Schumann. Klavierquartett Es-Dur, op. 47". Villa Musica (in German). Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  22. ^ a b Daverio 1997, p. 261.
  23. ^ Daverio 2002, p. 36.
  24. ^ a b Smallman 1994, p. 50.
  25. ^ Smallman 1994, p. 51.
  26. ^ Smallman 1994, p. 53.

Sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Brown, Julie Hedges (2013). "Study, Copy, and Conquer: Schumann's 1842 Chamber Music and the Recasting of Classical Sonata Form". Journal of Musicology. 30 (3): 369–423. doi:10.1525/jm.2013.30.3.369. ISSN 0277-9269.

External links Edit

piano, quartet, schumann, piano, quartet, major, composed, robert, schumann, 1842, piano, violin, viola, cello, written, during, productive, period, which, produced, several, large, scale, chamber, music, works, been, described, creative, double, piano, quinte. The Piano Quartet in E major Op 47 was composed by Robert Schumann in 1842 for piano violin viola and cello Written during a productive period in which he produced several large scale chamber music works it has been described as the creative double of his Piano Quintet finished weeks earlier Though dedicated to the Russian cellist Mathieu Wielhorsky it was written with Schumann s wife Clara in mind who would be the pianist at the premiere on 8 December 1844 in Leipzig Piano Quartetby Robert SchumannTitle page of the first edition 1845 autographed by the composerKeyE majorOpus47Composed1842 1842 DedicationMathieu WielhorskyPublished1845 1845 Durationc 27 minutesMovementsfourScoringpianoviolinviolacelloPremiereDate8 December 1844LocationLeipzigPerformersClara Schumann piano Ferdinand David violin Niels Gade viola Franz Karl Wittmann cello The work consists of four movements The first movement is in sonata form and begins with a hymn like introduction that leads to a more figural section The second movement a scherzo features a quick staccato figure that moves around a G minor scale with two contrasting trio sections The third movement Andante cantabile has been called the highlight of the work with one of the most beautiful cello themes of the Romantic period The finale includes contrapunctal writing and makes many references to the preceding movements At the premiere the Piano Quartet was well received Today it is recognized as the culmination of virtually all previous exploration of the piano quartet as a genre up to that time forming the foundations for later composers to build on Contents 1 Background 1 1 Relationship to the Piano Quintet 2 Form 2 1 Sostenuto assai Allegro ma non troppo 2 2 Scherzo Molto vivace Trio I Trio II 2 3 Andante cantabile 2 4 Finale Vivace 3 Reception and legacy 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Sources 5 2 Further reading 6 External linksBackground Edit nbsp Litograph of Schumann 1839The Piano Quartet in E major is preceded by a Piano Quartet in C minor WoO E1 that Schumann composed in 1829 near the end of his first year of study in Leipzig Possibly inspired by Mozart s Piano Quartet in G minor 1 and clearly influenced by Schubert s Piano Trio No 2 2 it was Schumann s most notable accomplishment to that date 3 and a remarkably polished work for someone who was as yet without formal training in composition 2 Nonetheless the Piano Quartet in C minor remained unpublished until 1979 4 Schumann would not compose any major chamber music until 1842 in which he produced several large scale works for varying instrumentation The first were his three String Quartets Op 41 which were completed by July followed by the Piano Quintet Op 44 that was written from September to October The Piano Quartet was sketched from 24 to 30 October and written out in a fair copy between 7 and 26 November the inscription Leipzig 26 November 1842 appears at the end of the manuscript 5 After the quartet he wrote the Fantasiestucke for piano trio Op 88 in December and the Andante and Variations for two pianos French horn and two cellos Op 46 between January and February 1843 6 nbsp Clara Wieck 1840Like the Piano Quintet the Piano Quartet was written with his wife Clara in mind though it was dedicated to Count Mathieu Wielhorsky a Russian cellist and impresario 7 A private performance of the work took place on 5 April 1843 at the Schumanns home in Leipzig with Clara at the piano who described the quartet in her diary as a beautiful work so youthful and fresh as if it were his first 7 After making several revisions on 24 August 1843 Schumann offered the work to the publisher Friedrich Whistling de and received a fee of 100 thaler After several delays due to the Schumanns tour of Russia in 1844 where the work was performed at a private recital it was published in May 1845 8 The manuscript is today held at the Berlin State Library while the initial sketches have been lost 9 The premiere took place on 8 December 1844 at the Gewandhaus in Leipzig with Clara Schumann piano Ferdinand David violin Niels Gade viola and Franz Karl Wittmann cello 10 as part of a farewell concert for the Schumanns who were leaving Leipzig for Dresden 11 8 Relationship to the Piano Quintet Edit According to Schumann scholar John Daverio the Piano Quartet can be interpreted as the creative double to the Piano Quintet also in E major and bringing together the piano with a complement of strings 12 Though both displaying the extroverted exuberant side of the composer s creative genius he did not consider them twins as the absence of one violin in the Piano Quartet makes for a more intimate and individual sound with a neo classic tone not felt in the Quintet 13 Compared to the far more common piano trio the addition of a viola in the piano quartet adds density to the texture of the ensemble s middle range that may result in sharp contrasts between the piano and the strings 14 This effect is even more pronounced when another violin is added in the Piano Quintet the piano and strings confront each other as distinct musical forces the strings often presenting a concerto like accompaniment to the piano In contrast the Piano Quartet emphasizes a chamber texture in which the instruments permeate to form an unified ensemble This is particularly evident in the slow movement 5 Form EditExternal audioPerformed by Menahem Pressler and the Emerson String Quartet nbsp I Sostenuto assai Allegro ma non troppo nbsp II Scherzo Molto vivace nbsp III Andante cantabile nbsp IV Finale VivaceThe piece is in four movements with the usual order of the internal movements reversed Sostenuto assai Allegro ma non troppoScherzo Molto vivace Trio I Trio IIAndante cantabileFinale Vivace A performance takes around 27 minutes Sostenuto assai Allegro ma non troppo Edit The brief introduction of the first movement Sostenuto assai resembles a hymn with four and five part harmony all strings using double stoppings to achieve a chordal texture 15 It leads to a more figural and abstract Allegro ma non troppo mm 13f that bears resemblance in its tone to Beethoven s Harp Quartet and Archduke Trio 13 Three striking chords lead to a held dominant seventh the right hand of the piano then presenting the first subject 16 nbsp The second subject group begins abruptly in the dominant G minor following a full close in the tonic producing a startling though temporary disruption of the harmonic rhythm 16 nbsp A transient return to the Sostenuto mm 125f leads to another Allegro section mm 136f in which the themes are developed The coda marked Piu agitato mm 320f concludes the movement 17 Scherzo Molto vivace Trio I Trio II Edit Although the scherzo is marked Molto vivace it is not exuberant in a manner similar to Mendelssohn a slightly sinister undercurrent is said to emerge throughout the movement 18 According to musicologist Basil Smallman it hints at the aura of fantasy found in various parts of Schumann s Kreisleriana and in his setting of Heinrich Heine s Es leuchtet meine Liebe 16 The scherzo features a quick staccato figure moving up and down a G minor scale 19 nbsp There are two contrasting trios in related keys 18 The first trio arises out of the same impulse as the scherzo s subject 20 nbsp The second trio has been described as thoroughly Schumannesque featuring a series of sustained syncopated chords 20 nbsp Andante cantabile Edit The Andante cantabile is a lyric song like movement full of romanticism 19 According to musicologist Karl Bohmer it is the highlight of the work featuring one of the most beautiful cello themes of the Romantic period 21 Music writer James Keller has called it one of Schumann s most sublime melodies perfect in its balance soulfulness and apparent simplicity remarking that it constitutes one of the magical Schumann moments in which the entire universe seems to hold its breath 18 The main theme unfolds in a rhapsodic manner through five variations interjected with a chorale episode in G major and concluding with a coda 22 Structure of the third movement 22 Section Excerpt AudioA Theme Cello Score nbsp source source source Var I Quasi canon violin amp cello Score nbsp source source source Var II Duo piano amp viola Score nbsp source source source B Chorale episode Score nbsp source source source A Var III Duo viola amp violin Score nbsp source source source Var IV Quasi canon violin amp viola Score nbsp source source source Var V Cello source source source Coda Finale prefigured Score nbsp source source source In the coda a three note figure is introduced and subjected to a spiraling series of melodic and harmonic transpositions Daverio counted these final 14 measures among the most evocative passages in all of Schumann s chamber music conjuring up a psychological state in which time and space seem to have been abrogated 23 In an unusual application of a scordatura the cello tunes the bottom C down to a B so that it can act as a pedal note 13 Smallman called this an ingenious piece of scoring but not likely to win much favour with the participating performer 24 This movement inspired Brahms in his Piano Quartet in C minor where the slow movement is also opened with a cello solo of similar style 13 Finale Vivace Edit The finale constructed partly on fugal and partly on sonata lines opens with the three note figure from the coda of the preceding movement 13 24 nbsp Exposition and development are followed by a recapitulation and elaboration of the earlier development The movement makes many references to the preceding movements the beginning of the second group recalls a syncopated motif from the slow movement mm 31f the development references the slow movement s coda and the digressive arabesque in A major in the recapitulation recalls the scherzo s first trio 13 Reception and legacy EditThe premiere was successful a critic for the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung calling the Piano Quartet a piece full of spirit and vitality which especially in the two inside movements was most lovely and appealing uniting a wealth of beautiful musical ideas with soaring flights of imagination adding that it will surely be received with great applause everywhere as it was here 8 Smallman noted that the Piano Quartet was never accorded the same recognition as the Piano Quintet largely because its principal themes are less immediately attractive However he called it in many ways a more powerful work and with its wealth of contrapuntal writing more cogently constructed He recognized both works as the culmination of virtually all previous exploration of their respective genres forming the foundations for later composers to build on 25 For at least a century after Schumann s works for piano and strings works for similar ensembles increased in significance in chamber music Schumann established a romantic model that many composers were tempted to emulate particularly those composers influenced by Austro German ideals such as Brahms and Dvorak this continuation can be traced till at least the time of Schoenberg and Hindemith 26 See also Edit1842 in music List of compositions for piano quartetReferences Edit Chernaik 2018 Chapter 1 a b Daverio 1997 p 51 Jensen 2011 p 24 Krebs 1999 p 263 a b Leisinger 2006 p IV Jensen 2011 p 199 a b Keller 2011 pp 423 a b c Leisinger 2006 p V Robert Schumann Klavierquartett Es Dur op 47 Brahms Institut in German Retrieved 5 April 2021 Waldersee Paul von 1882 Sammlung musikalischer Vortrage Band 4 in German Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel p 36 Geck 2013 p 178 Daverio 1997 p 259 a b c d e f Daverio 1997 p 260 Keller 2011 pp 423 424 Smallman 1994 p 47 a b c Smallman 1994 p 48 Murray 2015 p 361 a b c Keller 2011 p 424 a b Chernaik 2018 Chapter 11 a b Donat 2000 p 2 Bohmer Karl Robert Schumann Klavierquartett Es Dur op 47 Villa Musica in German Retrieved 21 March 2021 a b Daverio 1997 p 261 Daverio 2002 p 36 a b Smallman 1994 p 50 Smallman 1994 p 51 Smallman 1994 p 53 Sources Edit Chernaik Judith 2018 Schumann The Faces and the Masks Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 451 49446 7 Daverio John 1997 Robert Schumann Herald of a New Poetic Age Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 585 33154 6 Daverio John 2002 Crossing Paths Schubert Schumann and Brahms Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 535096 8 Donat Misha 2000 Booklet to Hyperion recording CDA67175 PDF Hyperion Records Geck Martin 2013 Robert Schumann The Life and Work of a Romantic Composer Translated by Spencer Stewart Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 28469 9 Keller James 2011 Chamber Music A Listener s Guide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538253 2 Krebs Harald 1999 Fantasy Pieces Metrical Dissonance in the Music of Robert Schumann Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 511623 6 Leisinger Ulrich 2006 Schumann Piano Quartet E flat major op 47 Urtext Munich G Henle Verlag ISMN 979 0 2018 0737 9 Murray Lucy Miller 2015 Chamber Music An Extensive Guide for Listeners Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 4342 2 Jensen Eric Frederick 2011 Schumann 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983068 8 Smallman Basil 1994 The Piano Quartet and Quintet Style Structure and Scoring Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 816640 5 Further reading Edit Brown Julie Hedges 2013 Study Copy and Conquer Schumann s 1842 Chamber Music and the Recasting of Classical Sonata Form Journal of Musicology 30 3 369 423 doi 10 1525 jm 2013 30 3 369 ISSN 0277 9269 External links EditPiano Quartet Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal nbsp Classical Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piano Quartet Schumann amp oldid 1174568530, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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