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prokofiev’s second quartet

On January 28th at 12 Noon, the Arnica Quartet (of which I’m a member) will be playing a concert at the OHSU Auditorium which will feature two works off the beaten path of the standard repertoire.

The first is the Adagio and Fugue, K. 546, of Mozart.  It’s a pretty severe work in terms of its relationship to much of the rest of Mozart’s output, very terse and rigorous in its style and rhetoric.  It is also highly chromatic, which marks a departure from earlier works, and reminds me – in a fashion – of the last movement of his E-flat major string quintet K. 614, with it’s highly chromatic rondo theme.  The fugue is unrelenting, complex, and breathtaking in its formal perfection.  It’s very much an homage to J.S. Bach, who inspired some of the most sublime responses from composers who followed him.  It also seems to be the perfect bridge between Mozart and Beethoven – particularly calling to mind the rigor and economy of the Op. 95 quartet “Serioso”.

The second work is the Quartet No. 2 in F-major, Op. 92 of Sergei Prokofiev.  This work has all of the attributes that one finds attractive in Prokofiev’s orchestral and instrumental works: driving rhythms, melodies both flowing and angular, and pungent harmonies.  I found this description as I was preparing to write this post:

The String Quartet No. 2 was composed in about five weeks in the autumn of 1942 in the little town of Nalchik, in the Kabardino-Balkaria Autonomous Republic, located in the foothills of the northern Caucasus mountains between the Black and Caspian Seas. During the summer of 1942, following the demise of the non-aggression pact between Hitler and Stalin, as the German Army was overrunning Russia, the Soviet government evacuated a group of its then favored musicians, actors, artists and professors from Moscow to the safety of this little known region.

It was under these circumstances that Prokofiev came to know of the folk music of this area. His fascination with the music led him to write this Quartet, the aim of which was to achieve, “a combination of virtually untouched folk material and the most classical of classical forms, the string quartet.”

Each of the three movements of the work contains actual folk songs and dances. Prokofiev took care not to prettify the music. He strove to keep the often harsh harmonies and “barbaric” rhythms of the originals, as had Stravinsky, Bartok and Skzymanowski in their use of folk materials of Russia, Hungary and Poland. In his faithfulness to his sources, Prokofiev came under adverse criticism from the official critics who also praised him for his use of folk music. Despite the carping of the critics, the work was an immediate success. The work was premiered by the reknowned Beethoven Quartet in Moscow on September 5, 1942 but the start of the performance had to be delayed due to a German air raid.

The first movement (Allegro sostenuto) is based on the dance, Udzh Starikov, heard at the beginning and on the song Sosruko, in which three players create an accordion-like accompaniment to the song, sung by the violin.

The second movement (Adagio) is based on a Kabardian love song, Synilyaklik Zhir, given to the cello to sing in a high voice. The middle section utilizes a folk dance, Islamei, which seeks to imitate the sound of the kemange (Shikhepishina), a variety of spike fiddle originating in Persia and in use in various forms throughout the Middle East. It is a long necked fiddle with typically 3 strings. It is held vertically, with the spike resting on the player’s knee and bowed. The movement ends with a brief return of the opening song.

The third movement (Allegro) is based on a mountain dance known as Getegezhev Ogurbi alternating with two lyrical themes and a reminiscence of the first movement.

There is much in the quartet which really brings to mind the wartime quartets of Dmitri Shostakovich, especially the quick changes between sarcasm, pathos, the energy of the peasant dance, and extremes of dynamic range.  I hope you can join us for the performance, it should be a lot of fun!

3 replies on “prokofiev’s second quartet”

Wow, i just got a copy of the Emerson playing Pro’s 2 quartets and the killer sonata for 2 violins. I’m generally not overly pro-Pro, but these works are getting under my musical skin. Strange stuff, at times – in a very good way.

I’m very fond of this Prokofiev quartet. The music of the Caucasus is really fascinating. The Kabardinians are a branch of the Circassians, and you may be interested to know the famous conductor Yuri Temirkanov is not a Russian but an ethnic Circassian from the region where Prokofiev composed the quartet.

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