String Quartet No. 11 (Beethoven)

Ludwig van Beethoven's opus 95, his String Quartet No. 11 in F minor, is his last before his late string quartets. It is commonly referred to as the "Serioso," stemming from his title "Quartett[o] Serioso" at the beginning and the tempo designation for the third movement.

It is one of the shortest and most compact of all the Beethoven quartets, and shares a tonality (F) with the first and last quartets Beethoven published (Op. 18, no. 1, and Op. 135). In character and key, as well as in the presence of a final frenetic section in the parallel major, it is related to another composition of Beethoven's middle period the overture to his incidental music for Goethe's drama Egmont, which he was composing in the same year he was working on this quartet.

The autograph manuscript for this quartet is inscribed "October 1810", but the paper on which it appears does not match the variety Beethoven is known to have used at that time. It is more likely that he finished it several months later. It premiered in 1814 and appeared in print two years later, dedicated to Nikolaus Zmeskall. Beethoven stated in a letter to George Smart that "The Quartet [Op. 95] is written for a small circle of connoisseurs and is never to be performed in public."[1] Upon listening to the piece, it becomes apparent why he made that assertion. This piece would have been quite out of character in 1810: it is an experiment on compositional techniques the composer would draw on later in his life. (Techniques such as shorter developments, interesting use of silences, metric ambiguity, seemingly unrelated outbursts, and more freedom with tonality in his sonata form.)

The historical picture of this time period helps to put the piece in context. Napoleon had invaded Vienna earlier that year, and this upset Beethoven greatly. All of his aristocratic friends had fled Vienna, but Beethoven stayed and dramatically complained about the loud bombings.

Form

The quartet is in four movements:

  1. Allegro con brio,
  2. Allegretto ma non troppo, 2
    4
    , D majorattacca subito:
  3. Allegro assai vivace ma seriosoPiù allegro, 3
    4
    , F minor – D major – F minor – D major – C minor – F minor
  4. Larghetto espressivo, 2
    4
    Allegretto agitato, 6
    8
    Allegro, , F minor

I. Allegro con brio

This movement is in sonata form.

Exposition (mm. 1–59)

There is no repeat of this already very short exposition, which adds to the startling nature of this piece as a whole.

Development (mm. 60–81)

    FM         cm     CM
    m. 60      ?      m. 77

The expected dominant pedal occurs beginning in m. 77, but the C prolongation is in the first violin.

Recapitulation (mm. 82–128)

Coda (mm. 129–end)

As Arnold Schoenberg notes in an essay reprinted in the collection Style and Idea, most of the themes and events of this movement – and the main theme of the second movement – contain some form of the motive D–C–D–E found in the second bar, even if transposed and changed in some way.

II. Allegretto ma non troppo

The form is AB | BA.

This movement is in D major, a startling and remote key from the F-minor first movement.

III. Allegro assai vivace ma serioso

This movement is in scherzo form, as typical in the third movement position. Although because of the very odd tempo marking Maynard Solomon warns against calling it a scherzo, preferring the phrase "march-trio."

IV. Larghetto espressivo; Allegretto agitato; Allegro

This is in the sometimes misunderstood sonata rondo form. In a sonata-rondo, the piece follows the thematic outline of a rondo (ABACABA), and the tonal outline of a sonata (I V I or i III i, etc.). Beethoven uses Mozart's favorite rondo form for this movement (ABACBA). The absence of the A theme in between the C and second B is a surprise and adds interest by reducing the repetition of the A theme.

Arrangements

Gustav Mahler arranged this quartet for string orchestra, mostly by doubling some of the cello parts with double basses.

References

Further reading

These sources contain information specifically about the Op. 95 quartet.

External links

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