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{{short description|Piano Quartet by Robert Schumann (1842)}}
{{short description|Piano Quartet by Robert Schumann (1842)}}
{{good article}}
{{use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}
{{use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}
{{Infobox musical composition
{{Infobox musical composition
| name = Piano Quartet
| name = Piano Quartet
| composer = [[Robert Schumann]]
| composer = [[Robert Schumann]]
| catalogue = Op. 47
| opus = 47
| image = TN-RSchumann Piano Quartet, Op.47 fe.jpg
| image = TN-RSchumann Piano Quartet, Op.47 fe.jpg
| image_upright = 1.2
| image_upright = 1.2
Line 19: Line 20:
| premiere_performers = {{hlist | [[Clara Schumann]] (piano) | [[Ferdinand David (musician)|Ferdinand David]] (violin) | [[Niels Gade]] (viola) | Franz Karl Wittmann (cello)}}
| premiere_performers = {{hlist | [[Clara Schumann]] (piano) | [[Ferdinand David (musician)|Ferdinand David]] (violin) | [[Niels Gade]] (viola) | Franz Karl Wittmann (cello)}}
}}
}}
The '''Piano Quartet''' in E{{music|flat}} major, [[opus number|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 (Schumann)|Piano Quintet]], finished weeks earlier. Though dedicated to the Russian cellist [[Matvei Wielhorski|Mathieu Wielhorsky]], it was written with Schumann's wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] in mind, who would be the pianist at the premiere on 8 December 1844 in [[Leipzig]].
The '''Piano Quartet''' in E{{music|flat}} major, [[opus number|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 (Schumann)|Piano Quintet]], finished weeks earlier. Though dedicated to the Russian cellist [[Matvei Wielhorski|Mathieu Wielhorsky]], it was written with Schumann's wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] in mind, who would be the pianist at the premiere on 8 December 1844 in [[Leipzig]].


The work consists of four [[Movement (music)|movements]]. The first movement is in [[sonata form]] and begins with a [[Hymn tune|hymn]]-like introduction that leads to a more [[Figure (music)|figural]] section. The second movement, a [[scherzo]], features a quick [[staccato]] figure that moves around a G minor [[Scale (music)|scale]], with two contrasting [[Minuet#Minuet and trio|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 music|Romantic period]]. The finale includes [[Counterpoint|contrapunctal]] writing and makes many references to the preceding movements.
The work consists of four [[Movement (music)|movements]]. The first movement is in [[sonata form]] and begins with a [[Hymn tune|hymn]]-like introduction that leads to a more [[Figure (music)|figural]] section. The second movement, a [[scherzo]], features a quick [[staccato]] figure that moves around a G minor [[Scale (music)|scale]], with two contrasting [[Minuet#Minuet and trio|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 music|Romantic period]]. The finale includes [[Counterpoint|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.
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 ==
== Background ==
[[File:Robert Schumann 1839.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Litograph of Schumann, 1839]]
[[File:Robert Schumann 1839.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Litograph of Schumann, 1839]]
The Piano Quartet in E{{music|flat}} 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 [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]]'s [[Piano Quartet No. 1 (Mozart)|Piano Quartet in G minor]]{{sfn|Chernaik|2018||loc=Chapter 1}} and clearly indebted to his reception of [[Franz Schubert|Schubert]] and particularly his [[Piano Trio No. 2 (Schubert)|second piano trio]],{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=246}} it was his most notable accomplishment to that date, and a "remarkably polished work for someone who was as yet without formal training in composition".{{sfn|Jensen|2011|p=24}}{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=51}} Nonetheless, the work remained unpublished until 1979.{{sfn|Krebs|1999|p=263}}
The Piano Quartet in E{{music|flat}} 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 [[Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|Mozart]]'s [[Piano Quartet No. 1 (Mozart)|Piano Quartet in G minor]]{{sfn|Chernaik|2018||loc=Chapter 1}} and clearly influenced by [[Franz Schubert|Schubert]]'s [[Piano Trio No. 2 (Schubert)|Piano Trio No. 2]],{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=51}} it was Schumann's most notable accomplishment to that date,{{sfn|Jensen|2011|p=24}} and a "remarkably polished work for someone who was as yet without formal training in composition".{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=51}} Nonetheless, the Piano Quartet in C minor remained unpublished until 1979.{{sfn|Krebs|1999|p=263}}


Schumann would not compose any substantial chamber music until 1842, which has been dubbed his "chamber music year". The three [[String Quartets (Schumann)|String Quartets, Op. 41]], were completed in July, followed by the [[Piano Quintet (Schumann)|Piano Quintet, Op. 47]] in September and October, the Piano Quartet in October and November, the ''Fantasiestücke'' for piano trio, Op. 47 in December, and the ''Andante and Variations'' for two pianos, French horn and two cellos, Op. 46 in January and February.{{sfn|Jensen|2011|p=199}}
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 (Schumann)|String Quartets, Op. 41]], which were completed by July, followed by the [[Piano Quintet (Schumann)|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.{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=IV}} After the quartet, he wrote the ''[[Fantasiestücke, Op. 88|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.{{sfn|Jensen|2011|p=199}}


[[File:JH Schramm - Clara Wieck (Zeichnung 1840).jpg|thumb|upright|Clara Schumann, 1840]]
[[File:JH Schramm - Clara Wieck (Zeichnung 1840).jpg|thumb|upright|[[Clara Schumann|Clara Wieck]], 1840]]
Like the Piano Quintet, the Piano Quartet was written with his wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] in mind, though it was dedicated to [[Matvei Wielhorski|Count Mathieu Wielhorsky]], a Russian cellist and impresario.{{sfn|Geck|2013|p=178}} A private performance of the work took place on 5 April 1843 at the Schumanns' home in Leipzig, as noted in Clara's diary: "In the evening we played Robert's E-flat major Quartet for the first time at our place, and I was again truly delighted at this beautiful and so youthful work." After making several revisions, on 24 August 1843 Schumann offered the work to the publisher {{ill|Friedrich Whistling|de}} and received a fee of one-hundred thaler. After several delays due to the Schumann's tour of Russia in 1844, where the work was performed in a private recital, it was published in May 1845.{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}}
Like the Piano Quintet, the Piano Quartet was written with his wife [[Clara Schumann|Clara]] in mind, though it was dedicated to [[Matvei Wielhorski|Count Mathieu Wielhorsky]], a Russian cellist and [[impresario]].{{sfn|Keller|2011|pp=423}} 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".{{sfn|Keller|2011|pp=423}} After making several revisions, on 24 August 1843 Schumann offered the work to the publisher {{ill|Friedrich Whistling|de}} and received a fee of 100 [[Saxon thaler|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.{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}} The manuscript is today held at the [[Berlin State Library]], while the initial sketches have been lost.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Robert Schumann: Klavierquartett Es-Dur op. 47|url=https://brahmsinstitut.de/Archiv/web/bihl_digital/schumann_drucke_units/schum_op_047.html|access-date=5 April 2021|website=[[Brahms-Institut]]|language=de}}</ref>


The public premiere took place on 8 December 1844 at the [[Gewandhaus]] in Leipzig with Clara Schumann (piano), [[Ferdinand David (musician)|Ferdinand David]] (violin), [[Niels Gade]] (viola), and Franz Karl Wittmann (cello),<ref>{{Cite book|last=Waldersee|first=Paul von|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XNVEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA36|title=Sammlung musikalischer Vorträge. Band 4|publisher=[[Breitkopf & Härtel]]|year=1882|location=Leipzig|page=36|lang=de}}</ref> as part of a farewell concert for the Schumanns, who were leaving Leipzig for [[Dresden]].{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}}{{sfn|Geck|2013|p=178}}
The premiere took place on 8 December 1844 at the [[Gewandhaus]] in Leipzig with Clara Schumann (piano), [[Ferdinand David (musician)|Ferdinand David]] (violin), [[Niels Gade]] (viola), and Franz Karl Wittmann (cello),<ref>{{Cite book|last=Waldersee|first=Paul von|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XNVEAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA36|title=Sammlung musikalischer Vorträge. Band 4|publisher=[[Breitkopf & Härtel]]|year=1882|location=Leipzig|page=36|language=de}}</ref> as part of a farewell concert for the Schumanns, who were leaving Leipzig for [[Dresden]].{{sfn|Geck|2013|p=178}}{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}}


=== Relationship to the Piano Quintet ===
=== Relationship to the Piano Quintet ===
[[John Daverio]] interprets the Piano Quartet as the "creative double" to the Piano Quintet, also in E{{music|flat}} major, and bringing together the piano with a complement of strings.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=259}} Though both displaying the "extroverted, exuberant side of the composer's creative genius", he does not consider them twins, as the absence of one violin in the Piano Quartet makes for a more "intimate sound", the "individuality" of the Piano Quartet deriving from a "neo-classic tone largely absent in the quintet".{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}} [[Ulrich Leisinger]] remarks that Schumann compensates for the missing violin by "emphasizing the chamber texture, in which the piano and strings, rather than squaring off as adversaries, intermingle to form a unified ensemble". Whereas in the Piano Quintet the piano and strings are "self-sufficient entities", they interweave more tightly in the "intimate texture" of the Quartet.{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=IV}}
According to Schumann scholar [[John Daverio]], the Piano Quartet can be interpreted as the "creative double" to the Piano Quintet, also in [[E-flat major|E{{music|flat}} major]], and bringing together the piano with a complement of [[String instrument|strings]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=259}} 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.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}


Compared to the far more common [[piano trio]], the addition of a viola in the piano quartet adds density to the [[Texture (music)|texture]] of the ensemble's middle [[Range (music)|range]], that may result in sharp contrasts between the piano and the strings.{{sfn|Keller|2011|pp=423–424}} 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.{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=IV}}
James Keller notes the difficulty in writing for a piano quartet. While the [[piano trio]] is a common ensemble, the addition of a viola adds density to the ensemble's middle range and "considerable skill" is required to "keep such forces melded into a like-minded ensemble, rather than drifting toward a 'piano versus strings' texture that suggests a concerto on a shoestring".{{sfn|Keller|2011|pp=423–424}}


== Form ==
== Form ==
{{external media
{{external media
| topic = Performed by [[Menahem Pressler]] and the [[Emerson String Quartet]]
| topic = Performed by [[Menahem Pressler]] and the [[Emerson String Quartet]]
| audio1 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvn_76HNQoY I. Sostenuto assai - Allegro ma non troppo]
| audio1 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvn_76HNQoY I. Sostenuto assai Allegro ma non troppo]
| audio2 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMZBW8vglvk II. Scherzo: Molto vivace]
| audio2 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zMZBW8vglvk II. Scherzo: Molto vivace]
| audio3 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvsD3IXTQvc III. Andante cantabile]
| audio3 = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvsD3IXTQvc III. Andante cantabile]
Line 50: Line 51:
}}
}}


The piece is in four movements, with the order of the internal movements reversed:
The piece is in four movements, with the usual order of the internal movements reversed:
{{Ordered list|type=upper-roman
{{Ordered list|type=upper-roman
|Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo
|[[Glossary of music terminology#S|Sostenuto]] assai – Allegro ma non troppo
|Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II
|Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II
|Andante cantabile
|Andante cantabile
Line 60: Line 61:


=== Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo ===
=== Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo ===
The brief introduction of the first movement (''Sostenuto assai'') resembles a hymn with four- and five-part harmony, all strings using [[Double stop|double stoppings]] to achieve a chordal texture.{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=47}} It leads to a more figural and abstract ''Allegro ma non troppo'' (mm. 13f.) that bears resemblance in its tone to Beethoven's [[String Quartet No. 10 (Beethoven)|"Harp" Quartet]] and [[Piano Trio, Op. 97 (Beethoven)|Archduke Trio]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}} Three striking chords lead to a held dominant seventh, the right hand of the piano then presenting the first subject:{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}
The brief introduction of the first movement (''Sostenuto assai'') resembles a hymn with four- and five-part [[harmony]], all strings using [[double stop]]pings to achieve a [[Chord (music)|chordal]] texture.{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=47}} It leads to a more figural and abstract ''Allegro ma non troppo'' ({{abbr|mm.|measures}} 13f.) that bears resemblance in its tone to [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]]'s [[String Quartet No. 10 (Beethoven)|"Harp" Quartet]] and [[Piano Trio, Op. 97 (Beethoven)|Archduke Trio]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}} Three striking chords lead to a held [[Dominant seventh chord|dominant seventh]], the right hand of the piano then presenting the first [[Subject (music)|subject]]:{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - I. 13f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - I. 13f.svg|none|600px]]


The second subject groups begins abruptly in the dominant G minor, following a full close in the tonic, producing a "startling, though, temporary disruption of the harmonic rhythm":{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}
The second subject group begins abruptly in the [[Dominant (music)|dominant]] G minor, following a full close in the [[Tonic (music)|tonic]], producing a "startling, though, temporary disruption of the harmonic rhythm":{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - I. 64f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - I. 64f.svg|none|600px]]


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.{{sfn|Murray|2015|p=361}}
A transient return to the ''Sostenuto'' (mm. 125f.) leads to another ''Allegro'' section (mm. 136f.) in which the themes are [[Musical development|developed]]. The [[Coda (music)|coda]], marked ''Più agitato'' (mm. 320f.) concludes the movement.{{sfn|Murray|2015|p=361}}


=== Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II ===
=== Scherzo: Molto vivace – Trio I – Trio II ===
Although the [[Scherzo]] is marked ''Molto vivace'', it is not exuberant in a manner similar to [[Felix Mendelssohn|Mendelssohn]], as a "slightly sinister undercurrent" emerges throughout the movement.{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} It hints at the "aura of fanasy" found in various parts of Schumann's ''[[Kreisleriana]]'', and in his setting of [[Heinrich Heine|Heine]]'s "Es leuchtet meine Liebe".{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}
Although the [[scherzo]] is marked ''Molto vivace'', it is not exuberant in a manner similar to [[Felix Mendelssohn|Mendelssohn]]; a "slightly sinister undercurrent" is said to emerge throughout the movement.{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} 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".{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=48}}


The scherzo features a quick staccato figure moving up and down a scale:{{sfn|Chernaik|2018|loc=Chapter 11}}
The scherzo features a quick staccato figure moving up and down a [[G minor]] scale:{{sfn|Chernaik|2018|loc=Chapter 11}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 1f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 1f.svg|none|600px]]


There are two contrasting trios in related keys.{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} The first trio arises out of the same impulse as the Scherzo's subject:{{sfn|Donat|2000|p=2}}
There are two contrasting trios in related [[Key (music)|keys]].{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} The first trio arises out of the same impulse as the scherzo's subject:{{sfn|Donat|2000|p=2}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 37f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 37f.svg|none|600px]]


The second trio is a "thoroughly Schumannesque series of sustained, syncopated chords in contrasting registers":{{sfn|Donat|2000|p=2}}
The second trio has been described as "thoroughly Schumannesque", featuring a series of sustained, [[Syncopation|syncopated]] chords:{{sfn|Donat|2000|p=2}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 137f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - II. 137f.svg|none|600px]]


=== Andante cantabile ===
=== Andante cantabile ===
The ''Andante cantabile'' is a slow movement of "surpassing lyricism", deeply romantic and song-like.{{sfn|Chernaik|2018|loc=Chapter 11}} It has been called the highlight of the work, featuring "one of the most beautiful cello themes" of the [[Romantic music|Romantic period]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Böhmer|first=Karl|title=Robert Schumann. Klavierquartett Es-Dur, op. 47|url=https://www.kammermusikfuehrer.de/werke/1669|lang=de|access-date=2021-03-21|website=[[Villa Musica]]}}</ref> Keller calls 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".{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} The main theme unfolds in a "rhapsodic" manner through five variations, interjected with a [[chorale]] episode, and concluding with a [[Coda (music)|coda]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
The ''Andante cantabile'' is a lyric [[Cantabile|song-like]] movement full of romanticism.{{sfn|Chernaik|2018|loc=Chapter 11}} According to musicologist Karl Böhmer, it is the highlight of the work, featuring one of the most beautiful cello themes of the [[Romantic music|Romantic period]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Böhmer|first=Karl|title=Robert Schumann. Klavierquartett Es-Dur, op. 47|url=https://www.kammermusikfuehrer.de/werke/1669|language=de|access-date=2021-03-21|website=[[Villa Musica]]}}</ref> 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".{{sfn|Keller|2011|p=424}} The main theme unfolds in a "rhapsodic" manner through five variations, interjected with a [[chorale]] episode in [[G-flat major|G{{music|flat}} major]], and concluding with a coda.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}


{| class="wikitable"
The cello is first to introduce the theme (mm. 3f.):{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
|+ | Structure of the third movement{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 3f.svg|none|650px]]
! colspan="3" |Section
!Excerpt
!Audio
|-
| rowspan="3" |'''A'''
|Theme
|Cello
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 3f.svg|none|600px]]|expanded=on}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Theme.opus]]
|-
|Var. I
|Quasi-[[Canon (music)|canon]]: violin & cello
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 17f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Var1.opus]]
|-
|Var. II
|Duo: piano & viola
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 31f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Var2.opus]]
|-
|'''B'''
| colspan="2" |Chorale episode
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 48f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Chorale.opus]]
|-
| rowspan="3" |'''A''''
|Var. III
|Duo: viola & violin
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 73f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Var3.opus]]
|-
|Var. IV
|Quasi-canon: violin & viola
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 88f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Var4.opus]]
|-
|Var. V
|Cello
|
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Var5.opus]]
|-
| colspan="2" |'''Coda'''
|Finale prefigured
|{{hidden|Score|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 117f.svg|none|600px]]}}
|[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. Coda.opus]]
|}


In the coda, a three-note figure is introduced, and subjected to a spiraling series of melodic and harmonic [[Transposition (music)|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".{{sfn|Daverio|2002|p=36}} In an unusual application of a [[scordatura]], the cello tunes the bottom C down to a B{{music|b}} so that it can act as a [[Pedal point|pedal note]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}} Smallman called this an "ingenious piece of scoring, but not likely to win much favour with the participating performer".{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=50}}
The first variation (mm. 17f.) is quasi-[[Canon (music)|canon]], featuring the violin and cello:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 17f.svg|none|650px]]


This movement inspired [[Johannes Brahms|Brahms]] in his [[Piano Quartet No. 3 (Brahms)|Piano Quartet in C minor]], where the slow movement is also opened with a cello solo of similar style.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}
The second variation (mm. 32f.) is a duo between the piano and viola:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 31f.svg|none|650px]]

The variations are interrupted by a chorale-like section in [[G-flat major|G{{music|flat}} major]] (mm. 48f.):{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 48f.svg|none|650px]]

The third variation (mm. 73f.) features a duo between the viola and violin, with the viola playing the main theme and the violin providing a figurative accompaniment:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 73f.svg|none|650px]]

The fourth variation (mm. 88f.) is a quasi-canon with the violin and viola, with the piano now providing the figurative accompaniment:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 88f.svg|none|650px]]

The fifth variation (mm. 102f.) is a cello solo of the main theme.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=261}}

In the [[Coda (music)|coda]], a three-note figure is introduced, and subjected to a spiraling series of melodic and harmonic transpositions. Daverio counts these final fourteen 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".{{sfn|Daverio|2002|p=36}} In an unusual application of a [[scordatura]], the cello tunes the bottom C down to a B{{music|b}} so that it can act as a [[Pedal point|pedal note]].{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}} [[Basil Smallman]] calls this an "ingenious piece of scoring, but not likely to win much favour with the participating performer".{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=50}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - III. 117f.svg|none|650px]]

This movement inspired [[Johannes Brahms|Brahms]] in his [[Piano Quartet No. 3 (Brahms)|Piano Quartet in C minor]], where the slow movement is also opened with a luscious cello solo.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}


=== Finale: Vivace ===
=== Finale: Vivace ===
The finale, constructed partly on [[Fugue|fugal]] and partly on [[Sonata form|sonata]] lines, opens with the three-note figure from the coda of the preceding movement:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=50}}
The finale, constructed partly on [[Fugue|fugal]] and partly on [[Sonata form|sonata]] lines, opens with the three-note figure from the coda of the preceding movement:{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=50}}
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - IV. 1f.svg|none|650px]]
:[[File:Schumann - Piano Quartet - IV. 1f.svg|none|600px]]


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{{music|flat}} major in the recapitulation recalls the scherzo's first trio.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}
[[Exposition (music)|Exposition]] and development are followed by a [[Recapitulation (music)|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{{music|flat}} major in the recapitulation recalls the scherzo's first trio.{{sfn|Daverio|1997|p=260}}


== Reception and legacy ==
== Reception and legacy ==
After the public premiere on 8 December 1844, a critic for the ''[[Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung]]'' called 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".{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}}
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".{{sfn|Leisinger|2006|p=V}}


Smallman notes 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 calls it "in many ways a more powerful work and, with its wealth of contrapuntal writing, more cogently constructed". Nonetheless, he recognizes both works as the culmination of virtually all previous exploration of their respective genres, forming the foundations for later composers to build on.{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=51}} For at least a hundred years after Schumann, works for large keyboard ensembles gained considerable importance in chamber music. Schumann established a [[Romantic music|romantic]] model that many composers of various backgrounds were tempted to emulate, particularly those influenced by Austro-German ideals such as [[Johannes Brahms|Brahms]] and [[Antonín Dvořák|Dvořák]]; this continuation can be traced till at least the time of [[Arnold Schoenberg|Schoenberg]] and [[Paul Hindemith|Hindemith]].{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=53}}
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.{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=51}} 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 [[Antonín Dvořák|Dvořák]]; this continuation can be traced till at least the time of [[Arnold Schoenberg|Schoenberg]] and [[Paul Hindemith|Hindemith]].{{sfn|Smallman|1994|p=53}}

== See also ==
* [[1842 in music]]
* [[List of compositions for piano quartet]]


== References ==
== References ==
Line 134: Line 167:
* {{Cite book|last=Jensen|first=Eric Frederick|title=Schumann|date=2011|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-983068-8|edition=2nd|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdGlFgzLW6MC}}
* {{Cite book|last=Jensen|first=Eric Frederick|title=Schumann|date=2011|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-983068-8|edition=2nd|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xdGlFgzLW6MC}}
* {{Cite book|last=Smallman|first=Basil|author-link=Basil Smallman|title=The Piano Quartet and Quintet: Style, Structure, and Scoring|date=1994|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-816640-5|location=Oxford|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7TzEBCIO8sgC}}
* {{Cite book|last=Smallman|first=Basil|author-link=Basil Smallman|title=The Piano Quartet and Quintet: Style, Structure, and Scoring|date=1994|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-816640-5|location=Oxford|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7TzEBCIO8sgC}}

=== Further reading ===
* {{Cite journal|last=Brown|first=Julie Hedges|date=2013|title=Study, Copy, and Conquer: Schumann's 1842 Chamber Music and the Recasting of Classical Sonata Form|url=https://online.ucpress.edu/jm/article-abstract/30/3/369/63476/Study-Copy-and-ConquerSchumann-s-1842-Chamber?redirectedFrom=fulltext|journal=[[The Journal of Musicology|Journal of Musicology]]|volume=30|issue=3|pages=369–423|doi=10.1525/jm.2013.30.3.369|issn=0277-9269|ref=none}}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{IMSLP|work=Piano_Quartet,_Op.47_(Schumann,_Robert)|cname=Piano Quartet}}
* {{IMSLP|work=Piano_Quartet,_Op.47_(Schumann,_Robert)|cname=Piano Quartet}}
*{{YouTube|sM9iSRm97Ws|Performance of the Piano Quartet}}, by [[Daishin Kashimoto]], [[Gilad Karni]], [[Sol Gabetta]] and Nelson Goerner

== See also ==
* [[1842 in music]]
* [[List of compositions for piano quartet]]


{{Schumann chamber music}}
{{Schumann chamber music}}
{{Portalbar|Classical Music}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}



Latest revision as of 08:36, 9 September 2023

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 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.

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
audio icon I. Sostenuto assai – Allegro ma non troppo
audio icon II. Scherzo: Molto vivace
audio icon III. Andante cantabile
audio icon 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

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