BEETHOVEN’S LATE QUARTETS 1

EPISODE ONE: THE BASICS

Here is a brief overview. Best viewed in landscape format.

Beethoven’s Quartets: Beethoven wrote 16 quartets over the course of about 29 years: 6 in his ‘Early’ period, then 5 each in his ‘Middle’ and ‘Late’ periods.  His output is patchy as you can see in the table – the Early works were published in a group (as Haydn and Mozart had done, usually in sixes) and were written over 3 or 4 years around his 30th birthday. Then he turned to other things before returning to the genre in his later 30s – his Middle Quartets. After the last of these, Opus 95, there was a 14 year-gap before a commission prompted Beethoven, now in his 50s, to write the Late Quartets.

No   
1-6Op 186 quartets, written 1798-1801 published 1802Early
7-9Op 59 [Rasumovsky]3 quartets written in 1806Middle
10Op 74 [Harp]1809
11Op 95 [Serioso]1810
The ‘Late’ quartetsOp 127-1355 quartets + 1 movement – see below between 1824-1826Late 

“Late”? : Beethoven was just 57 when he died, so arguably middle-aged still. But he suffered extremely bad health and quite a bit of his treatment involved drinking wine and brandy. So, his Late period is not his most prolific… It is generally accepted to have started around 1815, so, as he died in March 1827 it lasted around 12 years in total. These are the main works from those years: 

1816-22The Last 5 SonatasPiano
1819-23The Diabelli VariationsPiano
1819-23Missa SolemnisChoir, soloists and orchestra
1820-24The Op 119 and 126 BagatellesPiano
1822-24Symphony No 9Choir, soloists and orchestra
1825-26The ‘Late Quartets’String quartet

If these were not Beethoven’s most prolific years, it must be remembered that individual works were generally longer and cost him greater effort: in them he was reinventing genres, techniques…even the fundamentals of musical language. There is huge diversity: the 9th Symphony or Missa Solemnis may each last an hour but the shortest Bagatelle is little more than a scrap of a thought, maybe 20 seconds.

Why Quartets Then?

Rich Russians were surprisingly important to Beethoven’s quartets.  One – Andrey Kirillovich Razumovsky – commissioned the 3 (Middle) quartets that carry his name; another, Nikolai Borisovich Galitzin, begged Beethoven for new quartets in 1822, offering to pay “whatever amount you would deem adequate”. Beethoven asked 50 ducats per quartet – very modest by today’s standards: a ducat is now valued at around £110, so approximately £5,500 per quartet: you would not find many composers of Beethoven’s stature happy with that fee today. 

Galitzin commissioned in 1822, but Beethoven did not set to work in earnest until 1824, and he eventually delivered 3 quartets to his patient patron – Op 127, Op 130 and Op 131. This triggered further work on Op 132 and Op 135. It is astounding how much music there is in them: 

 KeyDateDuration
Op 127 E♭ 1824-537’-40’
Op 130B♭1824-538’-44’
Op 131C♯ m 1824-639’-40’
Op 132A m1825-640’-50’
Op 133 [Grosse Fuge]B♭182516’
Op 135F182624’-27’

That adds up to around 3.5 hours of music written over 2 years or so – and remember, he was pretty ill for most of the second year. Nowadays it is not unusual for a healthy and fit composer to consider that producing between 1 and 2 hours of music in a year is pretty good. And while many composers earlier than Beethoven produced vastly more than this, most of them were working within very clearly defined conventions and forms, all of which had their own short-hands which speeded up production: so Vivaldi may have written 500 concerti, and each has  its own character, but not one of them is as different from the other 499 than any of the Late Quartets is different from the other 4. Going further: all of them, except possibly the very last, belong to a different world from any quartet by any previous composer.

Where to start?

For the first few posts, I am going to stick to overview and navigation. We are dealing with 5 exceptionally unusual pieces, composed in a relatively short time, and for all their differences, they share a strong family resemblance – so understanding that before focusing on individual works is helpful.

You can sense just how unusual these pieces are from a quick survey of their shapes: only 2 have the kind of 4-movement patterns typical of all of Mozart’s and Haydn’s (and their many quartet-composing contemporaries’) quartets. No 2 are alike, and the bald statement of movements below conceals a wealth of idiosyncrasy and invention.  

Op 127Op 130Op 131Op 132Op 135
Maestoso – AllegroAdagio, ma non troppo – AllegroAdagio ma non troppo e molto espressivoAssai sostenuto – Allegro Allegretto
 PrestoAllegro molto vivaceAllegro ma non tanto Vivace
Adagio, ma non troppo e molto cantabile – Andante con moto  – Adagio molto espressivo – Tempo I Andante con moto, ma non troppo. Poco scherzosoAllegro moderato – Adagio“Heiliger Dankgesang eines Genesenen an die Gottheit, in der Lydischen Tonart”. Molto adagio – AndanteLento assai, cantante e tranquillo
Scherzando vivaceAlla danza tedesca. Allegro assaiAndante ma non troppo e molto cantabile – Più mosso – Andante moderato e lusinghiero – Adagio – Allegretto – Adagio, ma non troppo e semplice – AllegrettoAlla marcia, assai vivace  
  Presto  
 Cavatina. Adagio molto espressivoAdagio quasi un poco andante  
AllegroGroße Fuge: Ouverture. Allegro – Meno mosso e moderato – Allegretto – Fuga. [Allegro] – Meno Mosso e moderato – Allegro molto e con brio – AllegroAllegroAllegro appassionatoDer schwer gefaßte Entschluß. Grave, ma non troppo tratto (Muss es sein?) – Allegro (Es muss sein!) – Grave, ma non troppo tratto – Allegro 

Here’s the starting point for what I am going to look at and listen for next: what types of movements make up the late quartets?  Thanks for reading.

Go on to the second post.