The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

124


J


oseph Haydn invented the
string quartet. Why he
settled on the combination
of two violins, viola, and cello is not
certain, but it may be that their
individual pitch registers closely
reflect the voices in a choir. The
instruments, and the musicians to
play them, would also have been
readily available at the Hungarian
court of the Esterházy family, where
Haydn was composer-in-residence.
The standard chamber music
grouping before Haydn was the
trio sonata, in which a keyboard
instrument was joined by two high-
melody instruments (violin or flute),
with a continuo instrument, such
as a cello, doubling the bass line of
the keyboard. Haydn’s inspired use
of four instruments of the string
family effectively modernized an
older tradition that Henry Purcell
had developed a century earlier
with his String Fantasias for up to
six voices, performed on viols.

Enhanced sound
Haydn benefited from the great
strides that had been made in
instrument-making, epitomized
in Italy by the Amati family,
Antonio Stradivari, Francesco

Rugeri, and the Guarneri family.
More responsive violins, violas,
and cellos were exciting both to
composers and players. Haydn was
also interested in the advances in
bow-making. Earlier bows had to
stay close to the string, releasing
sounds in a sustained manner; by
“bouncing” the new bow off the
string, a quick, almost percussive
sound could be produced, as Haydn
shows in the finale of his Op. 33, C
major quartet (1781).
The sound-carrying qualities
of these new instruments and
techniques eventually spurred the
composition of chamber music that
could be performed in large concert
halls and not just in private salons.

Original, emotive works
The emotional expressiveness of
Haydn’s mature work links it to the
German Sturm und Drang (Storm
and Stress) artistic movement.
For Haydn, the string quartet was
the perfect vehicle for extreme
emotional contrasts designed to
shock the audience. His early
accomplished quartets include
Op. 9, which he later declared
was the true starting point of
his quartet compositions, and

Joseph Haydn Spanning the Baroque and
Classical periods, Joseph
Haydn was a key figure in
the development of the Classical
style. Born in Lower Austria in
1732 to parents of modest means,
he was a musically gifted child
and attended a cathedral choir
school in Vienna from the age of
eight. His early music, including
some string quartets, was first
published in Paris in 1764.
Haydn’s employment from
1761 to 1790 at Esterházy
Palace, in Hungary, cemented
his reputation as a composer. He
later traveled to many musical

capitals, most notably to London
where his compositions were in
great demand. After the London
Symphonies (93–104), Haydn
wrote only six Masses and two
oratorios. In his last public
appearance, he conducted The
Seven Last Words in December


  1. He died quietly at home
    in Vienna in 1809.


DEVELOPMENT OF THE STRING QUARTET


IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Development of the
string quartet

BEFORE
1198 Pérotin’s motet
Viderunt omnes establishes
the practice of composing
for four voices—the basis
of the string quartet.

16th–17th centuries Early
pieces for string quartets
include Gregorio Allegri’s
fou r-pa r t Sinfonia and
Alessandro Scarlatti’s Sonate a
quattro, but the standard form
of chamber music was the trio
sonata, usually for two violins
and basso continuo.

AFTER
1890s Inspired by Haydn,
London concert promoter
Johann Peter Salomon brought
string quartets out of private
drawing rooms and into public
concert halls.

Other key works

1768 Symphony No. 49
1795 Piano trio No. 24 in D major
1797–1798 The Creation
1798 Nelson Mass

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