Uploaded by pelodelperro on Sep 18, 2010
String Quartet, L. 85 (Op. 10), (1893)
I. Animé et très décidé
II. Assez vif et bien rythmé
III. Andantino, doucement expressif
IV. Très modéré -- Très mouvementé et avec passion
Emerson String Quartet
Debussy began work on the composition of his only string quartet in 1892. Little documentary evidence, save for one or two passing oblique references in letters to friends remains to indicate his rate of progress. The final movement, however, caused him no little trouble, and only in August 1893 did Debussy feel able to write to his colleague André Poniatowski that "I think I can finally show you the last movement of the quartet, which has made me really miserable!"
Cast in the traditional four movements, Debussy's Quartet in G minor, Op. 10 has as its most distinctive feature its overarching preoccupation with timbre and sonority. The work as a whole offers a compendium of string-playing techniques, yet it also displays a concision of thought rare, perhaps, in a composition often regarded (along with the quartet by Ravel) as one of the seminal impressionist works in the string quartet genre.
Its fascinating and readily palpable thematic concentration seems all the more remarkable when one realizes that the very first theme of the opening movement (Animé et très décidé) comes to furnish almost all of the diverse thematic components for the entire work. Another ingenious feature (possibly less immediately apparent to the listener at first hearing) is that the quartet is less dominated by melodic or harmonic considerations than by a rhythmic flexibility which carries the potential for seemingly endless variety. In this respect, Debussy's string quartet seems to strongly prefigure those by Bartók. Yet it remains unmistakably a work dominated by the sensuality and longueurs of French late nineteenth century Romanticism, a strong feature of the slow third movement (Andantino doucement expressif).
The work is also strongly predictive of the disjunctive and highly polarized new musical language that would assert itself in the two decades following its completion. The Scherzo (Assez vif et bien rythmé), for example, makes use of the disruptive sonic confrontations that can occur when rapidly alternating pizzicato and bowed passages produce what one commentator has described as "a confusion that forces the listener to concentrate on the textures, rather than the linear form of the music." These apparently disparate elements are then welded together in a finale of striking economy of means, and only at the close does it become really clear that the opening gestures of the work have actually altered themselves and coalesced to produce an organic unity of some 25 minutes' duration.
The work was to be dedicated to Ernest Chausson, whose personal reservations eventually diverted the composer's original intentions. Debussy sold his score for a mere 250 francs to the publishers Durand & Cie, who, as he later recalled, "were cynical enough about it to freely admit that what they were paying me didn't cover all the labor this 'work' has entailed." Not surprisingly, the quartet was widely misunderstood at its premiere, given by the Ysayë Quartet on December 29, 1893. At the time, the composer Guy Ropartz was the lone voice in a wilderness of critical lack of interest; he described the quartet as a work "dominated by the influence of young Russia (interestingly, Debussy's patroness in the early 1880s had been Nadezhda von Meck, better known for her support of Tchaikovsky); there are poetic themes, rare sonorities, the first two movements being particularly remarkable." [Allmusic.com]
Art by Gustave Caillebotte
-
29 likes, 0 dislikes
7:42
Claude Debussy - String Quartet in G minor IIIby pelodelperro7,611 views
7:09
Claude Debussy - String Quartet in G minor IVby pelodelperro5,146 views
6:23
Claude Debussy - String Quartet in G minor Iby pelodelperro8,655 views
7:53
Debussy - String Quartet in g minor, Op. 10 - IV - Trés modéré - En animant peu á peuby NIUSoMOfficial4,587 views
9:59
Sirenes. Claude Debussyby vatobel53493,826 views
3:47
Tokyo String Quartet- Debussy String Quartet; 2. Assez vif et bien rythméby k73f1,024 views
16:30
Modern Music, Debussy (Chapter 1)by DCioccoloni1,262 views
10:17
Borodin,String Quartet No 2 D major 1st and intro of 2nd Mov Kopelman String Quartetby opusoctopus56,447 views
7:29
Debussy: String Quartet 1st movement (2010)by bigdaveistheman856 views
41 videos

Debussy
10:35
Béla Bartók - String Quartet No. 2, Iby pelodelperro1,618 views
3:08
Claude Debussy - Bruyèresby leobster30,893 views
6:14
Debussy - String Quartet In G Minor (1/4) - Juilliard Quartetby music0707106,161 views
6:14
C.Debussy - Quartetto in sol min. op. 10 - Paolo Fiordaliceby fiorda2007569 views
7:31
Alban Berg Quartet, Bartok String Quartet No.6, 1st Movby honekawasujiemon7,951 views
3:43
Debussy Valse Romantiqueby MagicDonDino339,998 views
4:24
Claude Debussy - Reverie (Good quality)by scpkiko144,611 views
3:32
Mendelssohn - Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor, Op. 49, III Scherzo e leggeroby cmi6141,566 views
7:26
Borodin - String Quartet No. 1 in A major; Mvmt. I - part Iby novichok39,555 views
7:41
Mozart String Quartet in C "The Dissonance" by the Amadeus Quartetby Amiduffer844 views
- Loading more suggestions...
Ah, the very soul of impressionism, there are visible brush strokes, even in the music. A splendid performance by the Emerson quartet.
0011486 9 months ago