8 Jan 2019

HAYDN: String Quartet in B minor Op 33/1

From Music Alive, 7:30 pm on 8 January 2019

Josef Haydn, the 'father' of the string quartet pushes the form in new directions in his ground-breaking Opus 33 quartets.

Played by the Borodin Quartet at their Chamber Music New Zealand concert in Auckland Town Hall, 16 September 2018.

Borodin Quartet

Borodin Quartet Photo: CMNZ

'It was a duty that I owed to Haydn to dedicate my quartets to him; for it was from him that I learned how to write quartets.' So Mozart is reputed to have said of his own set of 6 quartets that he began writing in the new year of 1782 - after the Christmas 1781 publication of Haydn's Opus 33.

Haydn had had a considerable lay-off in the quartet department, when he'd presumably been kept busy in the employ of his patron Prince Esterhazy. He pitched this opus 33 set to potential subscribers as a 'brand new à quadro ... written in a new and special way, for I have not composed any for ten years'.

The opus was a further evolution in the Quartet form of which Haydn is thought of as the father.

No. 1 is in the rare key for quartets of B minor and much play is made in the opening movement of a search for that key.

Recorded in Auckland Town Hall, 16 September 2018 by RNZ Concert
Producer: Tim Dodd; Engineer: Adrian Hollay

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