String Quartet No. 6 (Bartók)

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox musical composition The String Quartet No. 6 in D minor, Sz. 114, BB 119, was the final string quartet Hungarian composer Béla Bartók wrote before his death in 1945.

The composition of the piece came at a very tumultuous time in the composer's life. With the outbreak of World War II and his mother's illness, Bartók returned to Budapest, where the quartet was finished in November. After his mother's death, Bartók decided to leave with his family for the United States.<ref name="karpati">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="keller">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="suchoff">Template:Cite book</ref> Additionally, he began experiencing pain in his right shoulder, which have been speculated as being early signs of the blood disorder that would eventually take his life.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Due to the war, communication between Bartók and Székely was difficult, and the quartet was not premiered until 20 January 1941, when the Kolisch Quartet, to whom the work is dedicated, gave its premiere at the Town Hall in New York City.<ref name="cooper">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="NY Times review">Template:Cite web</ref>

The quartet represents a departure from his previous two quartets, with a four movement scheme rather than the five movements of the previous two.<ref name=":0" /> Each movement of the piece begins with a slow introduction, which contributes to the nostalgic tone of the piece.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite book</ref>

Background

The string quartet was begun in August 1939 in Saanen, Switzerland, where Bartók was a guest of his patron, the conductor Paul Sacher. Shortly after he completed the Divertimento for String Orchestra on the 17th, he started on a commission for his friend, the violinist Zoltán Székely. Székely was acting as intermediary for the New Hungarian Quartet, who had given the Budapest premiere of the String Quartet No. 5.<ref name="cooper" />

During the composition of the piece, the Second World War began. After Germany's annexation of Austria in 1938, it became difficult for Bartók to get his works published, and, by extension, to receive royalties from them. This led to the composer seeking a publishing contract with Boosey & Hawkes.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref> In addition to the state of the world being tumultuous so too was the composer's life. In December 1939, after the completion of the quartet, Bartók learned of his mother's death.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite book</ref> Bartók then decided to leave with his family for the United States. Additionally, his own health began to fail.<ref name=":1" /> The early signs of a blood disorder began showing for which Bartók would undergo hydrotherapy.<ref name=":1" />

It can be seen from Bartók's sketches that he had intended the last movement to have a quick, Romanian folk dance-like character with an aksak rhythmic character, but he abandoned this plan, whether motivated by pure compositional logic or despair at the impending death of his mother and the unfolding catastrophe of the war.

Music

The work is in four movements: Template:Ordered list The String Quartet No. 6 does not feature the five-movement arch form used in Bartók's fourth and fifth string quartets. Each movement opens with a slow melody marked mesto (mournful). This material is employed for only a relatively short introduction in the first movement but is longer in the second and longer again in the third. The introduction of the first movement is stated by the viola.<ref name=":5">Template:Cite book</ref> It begins each movement of the quartet, but with variations in texture and harmony.<ref name=":5"/> Musicologists have suggested that the overall form of the piece resembles that of Gustav Mahler's Ninth Symphony.<ref name=":0" /> In the fourth movement, the mesto material, with reminiscences of the first movement material, consumes the entire movement.

I. Più mosso, pesante – vivace

File:Bartok - String Quartet No. 6, first tonal group theme.png
Theme of the first tonal group, movement I, tonality: D.<ref name="White">White, John D. (1976). The Analysis of Music, p.8. Template:ISBN.</ref> Template:Audio
File:Bartok - String Quartet No. 6, second tonal group theme.png
Theme of the second tonal group, movement I, tonality: F.<ref name="White" /> Template:Audio

This movement begins with a slow introduction by the viola alone marked mesto. The movement derives its material from this slow introduction to make a sort of sonata allegro form in D minor.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite book</ref> This structure may reflect the influence of Gustav Mahler, for it resembles the beginning of Gustav Mahler's Tenth Symphony with an introduction with a viola solo that is highly chromatic.<ref name=":0" />

II. Mesto – Marcia

This movement begins with a slow mesto introduction as well. However, rather than the theme being presented by a single instrument (in the first movement's case the viola), the theme is presented by all four members of the quartet. For this movement, the theme is presented almost in a canonic form. This form permeates throughout the entirety of the movement, with instruments pairing off and playing similar gestures in the beginning of the movement.<ref name=":3" /> Measure 35 of the movement is an example of this variation of texture and pairing, wherein Bartók pairs both violins together and the viola and cello together. The two violins play an ascending gesture, while the viola and cello play the same gesture inverted. Bartók would later go on to explore instrumental pairing on a much larger scale in his Concerto for Orchestra which was premiered in 1944.

III. Mesto – Burletta – moderato

The movement again begins with the mesto theme, this time in a slightly thinner texture than in the previous movement with three of the members of the quartet. This version of the slow introduction also features canonic elements, like in m. 7. The viola enters in m. 10, providing a harmony of stacked thirds.<ref name=":5" /> It seems that Bartók uses similar devices in this movement as the previous. After the slow introduction, Bartók pairs different instruments off again, as seen in m. 26. The movement also features different pizzicato effects as well as quarter-tone slides in mm. 26–29, giving the movement a humorous slant.<ref name=":3" />

IV. Mesto

This movement is in contrast to the previous three movements in that the mesto theme that had previously been relegated to a slow introduction now permeates the entire movement.<ref name=":5" /> Thematic material form the first movement also returns. However, that material is stretched and extended in length. Bartók originally intended to have a fast fourth movement which was supposed to recall his piece Contrasts from the previous year.<ref name=":3" />

Reception and aftermath

The quartet was published in 1941 by Boosey & Hawkes.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The quartet was premiered on January 20, 1941 in New York City. In the year before the premier, Bartók had permanently moved to the United States with his wife.<ref name=":4" /> After the composition of the quartet, a period of low productivity ensued for Bartók.<ref name=":4" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Financially unstable and with the couple's piano duet concerts receiving unfavorable reviews, Bartók began work in ethnomusicology in addition to concert tours in the United States. In the last year or so of his life, he made some sketches hypothesized to be the slow movement of a never completed seventh quartet.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Discography

Year Performers Label
1950 Juilliard String Quartet Sony Classical - 19439831102
1963 Juilliard String Quartet Sony Classical - 5062312 <ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Sources

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