String Quartet No. 19 (Mozart)
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The String Quartet No. 19 in
C major C major is a major scale based on C, consisting of the pitches C, D, E, F, G, A, and B. C major is one of the most common keys used in music. Its key signature has no flats or sharps. Its relative minor is A minor and its parallel min ...
, K. 465, is a
chamber music Chamber music is a form of classical music that is composed for a small group of Musical instrument, instruments—traditionally a group that could fit in a Great chamber, palace chamber or a large room. Most broadly, it includes any art music ...
composition by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (27 January 1756 – 5 December 1791) was a prolific and influential composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. Despite his short life, his rapid pace of composition and proficiency from an early age ...
, nicknamed " Dissonance" on account of the unusual
counterpoint In music theory, counterpoint is the relationship of two or more simultaneous musical lines (also called voices) that are harmonically dependent on each other, yet independent in rhythm and melodic contour. The term originates from the Latin ...
in its slow introduction.


History

It is the last in the set of six quartets composed between 1782 and 1785 that he dedicated to
Joseph Haydn Franz Joseph Haydn ( ; ; 31 March 173231 May 1809) was an Austrian composer of the Classical period (music), Classical period. He was instrumental in the development of chamber music such as the string quartet and piano trio. His contributions ...
. According to the catalogue of works Mozart began early the preceding year, it was completed on 14 January 1785. On 12 February, Mozart and his father performed the
string quartet The term string quartet refers to either a type of musical composition or a group of four people who play them. Many composers from the mid-18th century onwards wrote string quartets. The associated musical ensemble consists of two Violin, violini ...
along with two others (K. 458, 464) for Haydn. Anton and Bartholomäus Tinti most likely played the other parts in the ensemble. No patron commissioned these quartets, which makes them an unusually personal effort by the composer. In his dedication, he refers to the quartets as his "children" that he is sending "out into the great world". Mozart continues, "They are, it is true, the fruit of a long and laborious endeavour..." Deutsch, Otto.
Mozart: A Documentary Biography
'. Translated by Eric Bloom, etc. Stanford University Press: 1966.
In these quartets he deviated from his usual practice of short scoring (main voices) and filling in the rest later. Striving to combine Haydn's quartet language and Bach's counterpoint, he composed all four voices at once. Flothuis, Marius.
A Close Reading of the Autographs of Mozart's Ten Late Quartets
, in ''The String Quartets of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven: Studies of the Autograph Manuscripts''. Isham Library Papers III, ed.
Christoph Wolff Christoph Wolff (born 24 May 1940) is a German musicologist. He is best known for his works on the music, life, and period of Johann Sebastian Bach. Christoph Wolff is an emeritus professor of Harvard University, and was part of the faculty sinc ...
and Robert Riggs (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1980), 154–178.
Artaria & Company announced the publication of all six quartets on 17 September 1785 in the ''
Wiener Zeitung ''Wiener Zeitung'' () is an Austrian newspaper. First published as the ''Wiennerisches Diarium'' in 1703, it is one of the oldest newspapers in the world. Until April 2023, it was the official gazette of the government of the Republic of Austria ...
''. According to Leopold Mozart, the firm paid the composer 100 ducats for the publishing rights. The piece was commonly referred to as the "Dissonance" quartet by the time
Heinrich Schenker Heinrich Schenker (19 June 1868 – 14 January 1935) was an Austrian music theory, music theorist #Theoretical writings, whose writings have had a profound influence on subsequent musical analysis. His approach, now termed Schenkerian analysis ...
discussed it in 1906. It is unclear when and where the nickname originated.


Form


I. Adagio – Allegro

The 22-bar Adagio opens with quiet
eighth note 180px, Figure 1. An eighth note with stem extending up, an eighth note with stem extending down, and an eighth rest. 180px, Figure 2. Four eighth notes beamed together. An eighth note ( American) or a quaver ( British) is a musical note pla ...
Cs in the
cello The violoncello ( , ), commonly abbreviated as cello ( ), is a middle pitched bowed (sometimes pizzicato, plucked and occasionally col legno, hit) string instrument of the violin family. Its four strings are usually intonation (music), tuned i ...
. It is joined by the
viola The viola ( , () ) is a string instrument of the violin family, and is usually bowed when played. Violas are slightly larger than violins, and have a lower and deeper sound. Since the 18th century, it has been the middle or alto voice of the ...
on A and the second
violin The violin, sometimes referred to as a fiddle, is a wooden chordophone, and is the smallest, and thus highest-pitched instrument (soprano) in regular use in the violin family. Smaller violin-type instruments exist, including the violino picc ...
on E. The first violin enters on A, creating the initial "dissonance" that flummoxed so many listeners. The tension between the A and A is a structural feature of the entire quartet. The Adagio acts as a thesis statement for the composition, introducing the major ideas Mozart will revisit throughout the piece.Baker, James M.
Chromaticism in Classical Music
, in Christopher Hatch and David W. Bernstein (eds.), ''Music Theory and the Exploration of the Past''. University of Chicago Press, 1993. 286–294.
While playing with the quality of the sixth
scale degree In music theory, the scale degree is the position of a particular note on a scale relative to the tonic—the first and main note of the scale from which each octave is assumed to begin. Degrees are useful for indicating the size of intervals ...
, Mozart assiduously avoids the third to keep the tonality ambiguous. The quartal melodies give rise to
whole tone In Western music theory, a major second (sometimes also called whole tone or a whole step) is a second spanning two semitones (). A second is a musical interval encompassing two adjacent staff positions (see Interval number for more deta ...
sonorities. The E is only used as a neighboring tone until the first violin plays it on the downbeat of measure 14, but the part immediately descends to an E on the next beat. The entire Adagio is an elaborate preparation of the dominant chord which Mozart emphasizes with a fermata in its final measure. When the Allegro begins, the cello is silent, and the viola has taken up its eighth note Cs, playing them an octave higher and much more ebulliently than the opening bars. The main theme of the Allegro is constructed on a 2-bar motive beginning on the tonic C. Mozart sequences the motive up to D in the next two bars, but instead of continuing up to E in the third statement, he leaps to G. He withholds the expected E in the sequence until bar 167 well into the recapitulation of the movement. In the coda, there is a series of 21 consecutive dissonances in just 3 measures.


II. Andante cantabile

The second movement is a
sonatina A sonatina (French: “sonatine”, German: “Sonatine") is a small sonata. As a musical term, ''sonatina'' has no single strict definition; it is rather a title applied by the composer to a piece that is in basic sonata form, but is shorter and ...
in F major. The violin's "dissonant" A natural from the quartet's opening now has pride of place as the mediant scale degree. In bars 93–101, the A returns to prominence as Mozart slips into the parallel minor. The movement has been called the "heart" of the entire piece.Irving, John. ''Mozart: The "Haydn" Quartets''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
Alfred Einstein Alfred Einstein (December 30, 1880February 13, 1952) was a German-American musicologist and music editor. He was born in Munich, and fled Nazi Germany after Adolf Hitler, Hitler's ''Machtergreifung'', arriving in the United States by 1939. He is b ...
writes of the coda of this movement that "the first violin openly expresses what seemed hidden beneath the conversational play of the subordinate theme".


III. Menuetto and Trio. Allegro

The third movement is a
minuet A minuet (; also spelled menuet) is a social dance of French origin for two people, usually written in time. The English word was adapted from the Italian ''minuetto'' and the French ''menuet''. The term also describes the musical form tha ...
and trio in C major. The A is often ornamented with an
appoggiatura An appoggiatura ( , ; or ; ) is a musical ornament that consists of an added non-chord note in a melody that is resolved to the regular note of the chord. By putting the non-chord tone on a strong beat, (typically the first or third beats of ...
G, continuing Mozart's interplay between these two notes. In the trio, the tonality shifts to
C minor C minor is a minor scale based on C, consisting of the pitches C, D, E, F, G, A, and B. Its key signature consists of three flats. Its relative major is E major and its parallel major is C major. The C natural minor scale is: Cha ...
, returning the A to the fore. The cello's concluding melody in the trio highlights the vacillations between these notes. The texture is mercurial with unison passages often signaling a shift.


IV. Allegro molto

The final movement is a lively contredanse in sonata form. The exposition lasts 136 bars, the
development Development or developing may refer to: Arts *Development (music), the process by which thematic material is reshaped * Photographic development *Filmmaking, development phase, including finance and budgeting * Development hell, when a proje ...
62, and Mozart includes a 48-bar coda. There is a great deal of rhythmic variety in the movement. Mozart evokes Haydn's witty deployment of rests, which creates textural variety and contrasts the melodic material. The development is as harmonically audacious as the piece's introduction as it modulates through a
circle of fifths In music theory, the circle of fifths (sometimes also cycle of fifths) is a way of organizing pitches as a sequence of perfect fifths. Starting on a C, and using the standard system of tuning for Western music (12-tone equal temperament), the se ...
in minor keys before returning to the main theme.


Reception

The string quartet is one of Mozart's most analyzed compositions and has a long history of musicological debate that began almost immediately upon its publication.Vertrees, Julie Anne (1974).
Mozart’s String Quartet K. 465: The History of a Controversy
. ''Current Musicology'', (17), 96–114.
The first negative written comment about it was published in ''Magazin der Musik'' on 23 April 1787. The correspondent's letter was written on January 29 from Vienna, and reported on Haydn's visit to the city as well as Mozart's plans to travel to Prague and Berlin. The writer lamented the waste of Mozart's prodigious keyboard talent on composition and quipped, "...his new Quartets for 2 violins, viola and bass, which he has dedicated to Haydn, may well be called too highly seasoned-and whose palate can endure this for long?" Two years later, in the same periodical (now published in Copenhagen), Mozart's complexity was praised, "...his six quartets for violins, viola and bass dedicated to Haydn confirm it once again that he has a decided leaning towards the difficult and the unusual. But then, what great and elevated ideas he has too, testifying to a bold spirit!" By 1799, an anecdote from
Constanze Mozart Maria Constanze Cäcilia Josepha Johanna Aloysia Mozart (née Weber; 5 January 1762 – 6 March 1842) was a German soprano, later a businesswoman. She is best remembered as the spouse of the composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who from the eviden ...
was being repeated in the pages of ''
Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung The ''Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung'' (''General music newspaper'') was a German-language periodical published in the 19th century. Comini (2008) has called it "the foremost German-language musical periodical of its time". It reviewed musical e ...
'' (AmZ) that the Italian printer sent the
engravings Engraving is the practice of incising a design on a hard, usually flat surface by cutting grooves into it with a burin. The result may be a decorated object in itself, as when silver, gold, steel, or glass are engraved, or may provide an inta ...
back to Artaria because he assumed the notes were errors. The first analytical insult to the piece was penned by Giuseppe Sarti who met Mozart in Vienna in 1784. Mozart felt he was a "good honest fellow" and wrote a set of variations (K. 460) on one of Sarti's arias. In his analysis of the quartet, Sarti called the violin's opening dissonance "execrable" and accused the composer of having "ears lined with iron". Sarti also analyzed K. 421 with his poison pen and concluded, "From these two examples it may be perceived that the author (whom I neither know nor wish to know) is nothing more than a piano-forte player with spoiled ears (!). who does not concern himself about counterpoint; he is a follower of the system of the octave divided into twelve equal semitones, a system long since declared by intelligent artists, and experimentally proved by the science of harmony, to be false." The essay was seen as so gratuitous and vindictive that it was effectively embargoed by Bonifazio Asioli until his death in 1832 when it was finally published in ''AmZ''. The actual date Sarti wrote it is unclear.
François-Joseph Fétis François-Joseph Fétis (; 25 March 1784 – 26 March 1871) was a Belgian musicologist, critic, teacher and composer. He was among the most influential music intellectuals in continental Europe. His enormous compilation of biographical data in the ...
analyzed the quartet's introduction in his '' Revue musicale'' on 17 July 1830. Fétis was so certain that the dissonances were the results of printing errors that he tracked down Mozart's manuscript when he was visiting London, where it was in the possession of J. A. Stumpff. Fétis felt he could solve the problems created by Mozart by delaying the first violin's entrance by one beat. Not satisfied with this first revision, he altered it again by prolonging the 2nd violin's D into the 3rd bar. Both revisions clumsily rewrite Mozart based on rules of imitation Fétis devised in his own theoretical work. Several other writers tried their hand at analyzing or fixing Mozart's introduction, such as
Gottfried Weber Jacob Gottfried Weber (1 March 1779 – 21 September 1839) was a German writer on music (especially on music theory), composer, and jurist. Biography Weber was born at Freinsheim. From 1824 to 1839, he was the editor of ''Cäcilia'', a musical ...
, François-Louis Perne, and Raphael-Georg Kiesewetter. Ernest Newman devotes a chapter to the quartet in ''A Musical Critic's Holiday''. The convoluted intellectual history of this passage is similar to the handwringing over
Richard Wagner Wilhelm Richard Wagner ( ; ; 22 May 181313 February 1883) was a German composer, theatre director, essayist, and conductor who is chiefly known for his operas (or, as some of his mature works were later known, "music dramas"). Unlike most o ...
's prelude to ''
Tristan und Isolde ''Tristan und Isolde'' (''Tristan and Isolde''), WWV 90, is a music drama in three acts by Richard Wagner set to a German libretto by the composer, loosely based on the medieval 12th-century romance ''Tristan and Iseult'' by Gottfried von Stras ...
''. Ironically, Mozart's harmony is a clear functional predecessor to the
Tristan chord The original Tristan chord is heard in the opening phrase of Richard Wagner's opera ''Tristan und Isolde'' as part of the leitmotif relating to Tristan. It is made up of the notes F, B, D, and G: : More generally, the term refers to any chord ...
.De Fotis, Richard. "Rehearings: Mozart, Quartet in C, K. 465". ''
19th-Century Music ''19th-Century Music'' is a triennial academic journal that "covers all aspects of Western art music composed in, leading to, or pointing beyond the "long century" extending roughly from the 1780s to the 1930s." It is published by the University of ...
'', Summer 1982, vol. 6, no. 1. 38.


References


External links


"Mozart – Quartet in C major, K465 (Dissonance)"
lecture by Roger Parker, followed by a performance by the Badke Quartet.
Gresham College Gresham College is an institution of higher learning located at Barnard's Inn Hall off Holborn in Central London, England that does not accept students or award degrees. It was founded in 1597 under the Will (law), will of Sir Thomas Gresham, ...
, 10 October 2007. Scores
Original 1785 edition
published by Artaria at the Harvard Library. * * Recordings
Léner String Quartet
Columbia Records Columbia Records is an American reco ...
, 1923
Guilet String Quartet
Musical Masterpiece Society, 1923
Borromeo String Quartet
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum is an art museum in Boston, Massachusetts, which houses significant examples of European, Asian, and American art. Its collection includes paintings, sculpture, tapestries, and decorative arts. It was found ...

Musopen String Quartet
2013 {{Authority control #19 Compositions in C major 1785 compositions Music dedicated to students or teachers