String Quartet No. 1 (Piston)

String Quartet No. 1 by Walter Piston is a chamber-music work composed in 1933.

History

Piston’s First Quartet was premiered on March 7, 1933 by the Chardon Quartet, to whom it is dedicated. It is a charming but by no means bland work that later became a favorite of the Juilliard Quartet (Pollack 1982, 42). Aaron Copland singled out this quartet, praising its "acidulous opening movement, the poetic mood painting of its second, and its breezy finale", all of which "sets a superb standard of taste and of expert string writing" (Copland 1968, 132).

Analysis

The quartet is in three movements:

  1. Allegro (3/4)
  2. Adagio (8/8)
  3. Allegro vivace (2/4, 5/8)

The first movement is in sonata-allegro form in a mixed C major/minor. The harmonic language stresses chords based on perfect fourths, and features the chromatic, dissonant counterpoint characteristic of Piston’s early period (DeVoto 1988). A nightmarish quality is produced by the approach to the F-minor second, waltzlike theme through C minor (Pollack 1982, 42). The second movement is a simple ABA in E minor, with the strings muted in the brooding, chromatic outer sections, and an unmuted fugato in sharply dotted rhythms in the central part (DeVoto 1988). This movement especially features the cello (Pollack 1982, 42). The rondo finale is based throughout on a repeated-note motive of three sixteenth notes, and the first subject recalls the quartet’s opening movement by alternating C and D (DeVoto 1988). The string writing here is expert and spectacular, with some disorienting harmonic twists (Pollack 1982, 42).

Discography

References

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