Beethoven Op 127
Beethoven Op 127
Beethoven Op 127
Beethovens last three years (1824-7) were predominantly occupied in composing what we
now refer to as his late string quartets: Ops 127, 132, 130, 131 and 135. In November
1822, it had been 12 years since he had completed a quartet - the F minor Op 95 Serioso.
He had made sketches for another quartet and indeed in the summer of 1822 the
publishers Peters turned down an offer of a string quartet, but his interest in quartet writing
might never have seriously revived had he not had a commission for one, two or three
quartets from Prince Nicholas Galitzin, an excellent young amateur cellist from St
Petersburg. The commission almost went to Weber, whose recent opera Die Freischtz,
had excited Galitzin; but fortunately Karl Zeuner, the viola player in Galitzins own quartet,
nudged him towards Beethoven instead. Ignaz Schuppanzigh, the leader of Beethoven's
preferred quartet, was visiting St Petersburg around that time and might also have
contributed to Beethoven getting the commission. Completing the Missa Solemnis and the
Ninth Symphony occupied Beethoven for another eighteen months, but he finished three
quartets for Galitzin, Ops 127, 132 and 130, in February, July and November of 1825.
The Op 127 quartet reflects Beethoven's more genial and productive state of mind
following the difficult years of the mid-1810s. Like the Hammerklavier sonata of 1818 it
carves out radically new musical paths. The first performance by Schuppanzigh's quartet
in 1825 was a failure and another a few weeks later with a different leader fared little
better. It was only after players and audience alike had grown more accustomed to the
music that it was appreciated by more than a small group of enthusiasts and Beethoven
felt he could report to his publisher Schott's that "People have a high opinion of the
quartet. It is supposed to be the greatest and most beautiful quartet I've written, so they
say...".
Its depth is clear in the extensive slow movement: a set of six wonderful variations. The
slowly syncopated, pulsing cello starts the build-up of a dominant seventh chord from
which the first violin sings the long theme. The first variation disturbs the serenity of the
theme with a faster tempo and increased syncopation. Then the music speeds up again to
Andante con moto and the two violins gambol above a persistent staccato accompaniment
from the viola and cello. The gambolling eventually fades and the fourth variation
dramatically shifts key from 4-flats to 4-sharps via a favourite Beethoven trick of simply
sliding up a semitone (*) from C to
C#, as if he needs to be in E major
so he just goes there by the shortest route. The tempo changes too, to a slow two-beat
Adagio molto espressivo, for a variation of the utmost serenity. At the end of the variation,
the lower instruments pulse the new time, and the first violin returns us to 4-flats as we left
it, with a (now downwards) semitone shift. The first violin and cello share an ecstatic duet,
alternating the theme with accompanying arpeggios and trills. The final variation consists
of a stream of semiquavers, initially in the first violin, but then enriched in the three lower
parts. The music suddenly stops for a full half bar, pulsing quavers start and the first violin
leads us to the end of our visit to a new and strange world.
The Scherzo's complex rhythms contrast with its hurtlingly fast trio. Again Beethoven
plays with halting the music abruptly, fooling us into thinking that we are in for a second
dose of trio, before abruptly calling a halt. For most of the Finale, we are entertained by
genial and at times rustic music, but towards the end, the metre changes, and the main
theme undergoes an unearthly transformation against rapid triplet semiquavers.
Beethoven opens a door back to the serious and mysterious world of the slow movement,
where he leaves us.