String Quartet in F Major

String Quartet in F Major
Author: Maurice Ravel
Publisher: Alfred Music
Total Pages: 52
Release:
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781457476389

A string quartet, composed by Maurice Ravel.

Quartette, Vl 1 2 Va Vc, F-Dur

Quartette, Vl 1 2 Va Vc, F-Dur
Author: Claude Debussy
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 116
Release: 1987
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780486252315

Superb one-volume edition of two influential compositions noted for individuality, unique interpretations, delicate and subtle beauty. This clearly printed volume is sturdily bound for long life on the music stand.

String Quartet in F Major

String Quartet in F Major
Author:
Publisher: Alfred Music Publishing
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1985-03
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780769297095

A string quartet, composed by Maurice Ravel.

Quartet in F major for two violins, viola and cello

Quartet in F major for two violins, viola and cello
Author: Maurice Ravel
Publisher:
Total Pages: 58
Release: 1951
Genre: String quartets
ISBN:

The similarities between Maurice Ravel's only work for string quartet, the String Quartet in F major, and Claude Debussy's only work for string quartet, the String Quartet in G minor, Op. 10, can hardly be avoided or ignored. During the early years of his career, Ravel was frequently and sometimes vehemently criticized for having copied Debussy, and it was only later that musical society began to realize that, in the realm of piano music at least, it was equally possible that Debussy had imitated his younger colleague. With the String Quartet in F, composed in 1902 and 1903 and then revised up to 1910, however, Ravel seems more certain to have relied on Debussy's 1893 Op. 10; as emotionally, psychologically, and even structurally different as the two works are, one could never accuse them of having a language barrier. But, whereas Debussy's quartet is the work of a headstrong progressive still on his way to developing a mature, personal style, Ravel's is the work of an already mature artist more concerned with craftsmanship and traditional structure than with innovation. Not surprisingly, given their relative places in their careers when the two composers wrote their string quartets, Ravel's is the more sound piece of music and Debussy's is the more groundbreaking. Incidentally, Debussy, by all accounts, adored Ravel's piece, and though it makes the cut by just a couple of years, it is probably the most oft-played string quartet of the twentieth century. Ravel dedicated it to his teacher, Gabriel Fauré. Ravel's String Quartet is in four movements: Moderato très doux, Assez vif-Très rythmé, Très lent, and Vif et agité. The opening movement's pianissimo second theme is as hollow and melancholy as the first theme is warm and inviting. In the second movement, which serves as the Quartet's scherzo, Ravel moves into the pizzicato world already explored by Debussy in the scherzo movement of his String Quartet; the central portion (one hesitates to call it a "trio section") calls for the players to put mutes on their instruments. Bits of music from earlier in the Quartet can be heard, wearing new clothes, in the slow movement; likewise in the finale, which plunges straight into a frantic 5/4 meter bombast at its start, lightens up in the middle, and then ends in a blaze of zeal. - Blair Johnston on allmusic.com.

Quartet in F Minor, Opus 9

Quartet in F Minor, Opus 9
Author: Antonín Dvořák
Publisher: Alfred Music
Total Pages: 68
Release: 1999-08-26
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781457487637

A string quartet for two Violins, Viola, and Cello, by expertly composed by Antonin Dvorák.

The Beethoven Quartet Companion

The Beethoven Quartet Companion
Author: Robert Winter
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1994
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780520082113

"Reading The Beethoven Quartet Companion made me want to listen to the quartets again from a new sociological as well as musical perspective. It is an invaluable guide not only for professional and amateur musicians but also for anyone who is curious about culture and wants to find out more."--Yo-Yo Ma "These essays are the most readable, useful, and well-informed commentary available today on these masterworks. Michael Steinberg's 'program notes' to each quartet, directed at once to the musical beginner and to the expert, are as eloquent and persuasive as popular writing about music can get. . . . His essays are followed by equally expert and accessible contributions by other masters on The Master, providing literate music lovers with the context and equipment for a richer enjoyment and clearer understanding of these sixteen unique conversations among two violins, a viola, and a cello."--David Littlejohn, author of The Ultimate Art: Essays Around and About Opera "A fine collection of essays to assist the music lover in the seemingly endless quest to illuminate the Beethoven string quartets."--Arnold Steinhardt, The Guarneri String Quartet "This book delivers on the implied promise of its title--it provides a lively, readable, and wide-ranging introduction to the quartets. Readers at many levels of experience will find it profitable."--Lewis Lockwood, author of Beethoven: Studies in the Creative Process