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The Quartet Movement in B major, TH 110, also referred to as String Quartet in B major or String Quartet Movement in B major, by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky is believed to be the only surviving movement of his first attempt to compose a string quartet.

Background

Tchaikovsky started work on the quartet in August 1865 at his brother-in-law's house in Kamenka, basing the first movement theme on a song he heard the gardeners singing. [1] [2] [3] This theme was later recycled for the 1867 solo piano piece Scherzo à la russe Op.1, No. 1. [1]

His brother Modest stated that he believed other movements had been composed, but destroyed by the composer. [1]

The completed movement was premiered on 11 November 1865 at the Saint Petersburg Conservatory by a quartet composed of both faculty members and students (Konstantin Pushilov, Dmitry Panov, Vasily Bessel and Aleksandr Kuznetsov). [1]

The movement was not published until 1940. [4] [1]

There has been much speculation as to why the work was apparently abandoned after the completion of the first movement, despite the comments by Modest Tchaikovsky mentioned earlier. One theory is that the composer either intended the work to be a single movement quartet or decided to complete it as such; another, similar to theories advanced about other unfinished works, is that the composer put the work aside and never went back to it. [4]

Structure

The composition consists of a single movement, marked Adagio misterioso – Allegro con moto, and typically lasts 12 or 13 minutes in performance.

References

Notes
Sources
  • Anderson, Keith (1998). Tchaikovsky: String Quartets Volume 2 (CD). 8.550848. Retrieved 28 March 2013.
  • Langston, Brett, ed. (2006). "Tchaikovsky Research: String Quartet in B-flat major". Tchaikovsky Research. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  • Nice, David (2000). Tchaikovsky: Complete String Quartets (PDF) (CD). CHAN 9871(2). Retrieved 28 March 2013.
  • Silvertrust, R.H.R (2010). "The String Quartets of Peter Tchaikovsky" (PDF). The Chamber Music Journal. 21 (3): 3, 8–10. Retrieved 28 March 2013.

External links