Feanor
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OK, the string quartet is a sub-genre of classical music: does that make my question esoteric? I think we have already established that high-end system owners, (not that I'm one of those), DO NOT particularly gravitate to classical. Much less so, no doubt, to the string quartet, but it happens to be one that I listen to more than any other single classical form.
For those who care, "invention" of the string quartet is attributed to the great Classical Era composer, Franz Joseph Haydn. Those who care probably already know that a string quartet is comprised of two violins (1st & 2nd), one viola, and one cello. Any other combo isn't a string quartet although there are a smattering of 20th century SQ's that include a additional vocal part.
Enough background already. I'm always glad to get recommendations for string quartets that I might not have heard, or might not have paid sufficient attention to heretofore.
The following are 20 of my favorite quartets, (by no means an exhaustive list but a few that come readily to mind); I hope those "in the know" will recognize a fair diversity of eras and styles here:
I could just as easily have included a different Bartok, Beethoven, Janacek, or Shostakovich than the particular one listed.
For those who care, "invention" of the string quartet is attributed to the great Classical Era composer, Franz Joseph Haydn. Those who care probably already know that a string quartet is comprised of two violins (1st & 2nd), one viola, and one cello. Any other combo isn't a string quartet although there are a smattering of 20th century SQ's that include a additional vocal part.
Enough background already. I'm always glad to get recommendations for string quartets that I might not have heard, or might not have paid sufficient attention to heretofore.
The following are 20 of my favorite quartets, (by no means an exhaustive list but a few that come readily to mind); I hope those "in the know" will recognize a fair diversity of eras and styles here:
- William Alwyn: No. 3
- Malcolm Arnold: No. 2
- Béla Bartók: No. 4
- Ludwig van Beethoven: C-sharp minor, Op.131
- Alban Berg: Lyric Suite for String Quartet
- Alexander Borodin: No. 2
- Benjamin Britten: No. 3, Op.94
- Elliott Carter: No. 1
- George Crumb: "Black Angels"; (opps! the main emsemble is a string quartet but there are other sound producers).
- Claude Debussy: Op.10 in G
- Henri Dutilleux: "Ainsi la nuit"
- Antonín Dvorák: No. 12, Op.96, "American"
- Franz Joseph Haydn: D major "Largo", Op.76/5, H.3/79
- Leoš Janácek: No. 1 "Kreutzer Sonata"
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: C major, K.465 "Dissonance"
- Maurice Ravel: in F
- Arnold Schoenberg: No. 4, Op.37
- Franz Schubert: No. 14 in D "Death and Maiden"
- Dmitri Shostakovich: No. 8
- Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky: No. 3 in E flat minor, Op.30
I could just as easily have included a different Bartok, Beethoven, Janacek, or Shostakovich than the particular one listed.