
The First Quartet is the most romantic in spirit and actually
harbours a love story. It marks an affectionate withdrawal from a late
Romantic fin-de-siècle. The Second (1915-1917) takes us some way towards
the gritty, hard-hitting Bartók of the mid-late 1920s. By 1927 Bartók, a
superb pianist by any standards, was enjoying a worldwide concert
career, and soaking up what that world had to offer in musical terms.
One probable influence was Alban Berg’s Lyric Suite, an expressive
masterpiece that thrives on a plethora of complexities. Bartók’s Third
Quartet does likewise, a work that on one level seems to mimic a
Hungarian rhapsody (the alternation of fast and slow music) while on the
other takes tiny thematic cells and develops them into a teeming nest
of musical activity. Bartók’s next two quartets are both cast
unconventionally in five movements of a symmetrical, arch-like design.
The Fourth (1928) has at its centre an evocative though austere example
of Bartók’s ‘night music’ that opens with a rhapsodic cello solo leading
in turn to imitated birdsong. The Fifth Quartet (1934) is built on a
far larger scale. Bartok modifies the arch form by placing a scherzo at
its centre, a syncopated dance movement in Bulgarian rhythm, framed by
two slow movements using similar chord sequences. The air of ineffable
sadness that hangs over Bartók’s last quartet (1938) reflects not only a
swiftly sickening Europe but personal tragedy: his mother’s journey
towards death would end in December 1939. All four movements open with
the same, heart-rendering ‘mesto’ (sad) motto. Never has a quartet cycle
ended quite so equivocally, or sounded a truer warning, one that even
today inspires both awe and gratitude.
muy buena version. gracias !
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