Gut strings or metal strings, curved bows and straight bows, increasingly sophisticated playing techniques – these two concerts attest to the extreme malleability of the string quartet and its resistance to the most diverse and sometimes most distant aesthetics. The programmes also highlight the importance of the genre in France, despite its often troubled history. Several thousand quartets were published in Paris in the second half of the 18th century. Many composers, both French and foreign, had their works published there. This popularity was the result of a virtuous circle: a booming instrument-making industry, active publishers, an audience eager for new works, a violin school renowned throughout Europe, and a proliferation of venues for performances, held at courts, in aristocratic palaces and in bourgeois residences.
Paris was not only a city where quartets were performed, it was also a capital where musicians were trained and came to study. A young professor at the newly created Conservatory, Hyacinthe Jadin left behind a body of work of great interest despite his early death at the age of 24. His String Quartet in E-flat major, published in 1796, reflects Haydn’s influence through its delicate work on motifs and careful dramatic construction. An introductory “Largo” reveals the high quality of the writing from the very first moments: the elaborate counterpoint, the constant concern for varying the harmonies, the presence of expressive dissonances, the variation of the same element presented in different lights. The solemn and contemplative atmosphere of the first few bars is broken by an “Allegro” that follows without pause, marked by economy of material and the finesse of the concertante work. The slow movement borrows its main motif from the second theme of the first movement, before the minuet provides some contrast with its stylised connection to dance. The finale is dominated by the calls of the violin, chromaticism, and constant reformulations of the main theme.
While Jadin taught piano, Juan Crisóstomo de Arriaga arrived in the capital to study violin in Pierre Baillot’s class. A child prodigy from Bilbao, he was particularly keen to further his knowledge of composition. He wrote his three string quartets in the space of a few weeks and had them published in 1824, before dying two years later at the age of just 20. HisString Quartet No. 2 in A major is notable for its freshness and candor, sometimes tinged with gravity. The first movement charms with its simplicity: easily memorable melodies, carefree and elegant exchanges of cues, and a clear, essentially diatonic texture. The “Andante” presents a vocal theme followed by six variations individualised by tempo, contrasting major and minor, pizzicato writing, and slithers of silence. The “Minuet” offers a brief respite before a finale based on alternating moods in turn elated or blue. In String Quartet No. 3, the tone frequently becomes anxious or pathetic due to severe unison, dotted rhythms, acidic harmonies, and abrupt caesuras. The “Minuet” offers a brief respite before a finale based on moods that alternate between exaltation and depression. The tone of the quartet frequently becomes anxious or poignant due to the harsh unison, dotted rhythms, acidic harmonies, and abrupt caesuras. The “Pastoral” is probably the most surprising movement, with its two dark passages dominated by tremolos and dissonances. The “Minuet” retains some traces of feverishness before the calm brought by a short waltz at the heart of the movement. The finale prolongs this opposition between light and shadow, adopting a tone that is alternately playful and gloomy.
A form widely popular at the end of the 18th century, the quartet gave rise to a surprising paradox a few decades later. Although chamber music societies were flourishing, composers strangely turned away from the genre, with a few exceptions such as George Onslow, Théodore Gouvy, and Adolphe Blanc, whose works did not really catch on. Great careers were then to be found on stage – in opera, dance, and theatre – or through virtuosity. It was not until the advent of fin de siècle aesthetics that the quartet emerged again – although with a new paradox: that quintessential chamber music genre remained somewhat neglected, at least in France. Édouard Lalo, César Franck, Gabriel Fauré, Ernest Chausson, Claude Debussy, and Maurice Ravel wrote only one each, while Camille Saint-Saëns wrote two, at the end of his life, like Franck and Fauré. For these three composers, the quartet became the receptacle for their creative thinking as it reached its full flowering, or even its end.
Dated 1997, Pascal Dusapin’s Quatuor à cordes N°4 refers to Samuel Beckett, thanks to a short quotation noted at the end of the score which also highlights the temporal dimension of the work. Consisting of a single movement, the work offers a bumpy trajectory, based on sinuosity and shock. The form is organised around objects that crack, disintegrate, and then reassemble, while new obstacles appear amid constant tension. The instruments begin in unison, working on the same idea, then divide, turn away from each other, and reunite briefly before drifting apart again. Each fragment forms a small story which is both independent and linked to the main plot, the discourse proceeding both through accumulation and return, through erased traces as well as obscure memories that haunt the mind.
Jean-François Boukobza