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  4. Ludwig van Beethoven, three Quartets for pianoforte, violin, viola and violoncello WoO 36
 

Ludwig van Beethoven, three Quartets for pianoforte, violin, viola and violoncello WoO 36

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/41387
Version
Published
Date Issued
2020
Editor(s)
Miucci, Leonardo  
Type
Sheet Music
Language
eng
Subjects
M Music
ML Literature of music
MT Musical instruction and study
Publisher URL
https://www.baerenreiter.com/en/shop/product/details/BA9037/
Organization
Hochschule der Künste Bern  
Institut Interpretation  
Publisher
Bärenreiter
Submitter
MiucciL
Citation apa
Miucci, L. (Ed.). (2020). Ludwig van Beethoven, three Quartets for pianoforte, violin, viola and violoncello WoO 36. Bärenreiter. https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/41387
Note
When Beethoven wrote these three quartets he was 15 years old and a composition student of Christian Gottlob Neefe in Bonn. They reveal a strong Mozartian influence while the brilliant piano writing already gives a sense of the mature Beethoven. He may conceivably have written the works for the wealthy Mastiaux family in Bonn, as he gave piano lessons to one of the daughters and the other three siblings played violin, viola and violoncello.

The sole source for the quartets is the autograph score which contains many overwritings that shed light on the works’ original conception and possible alternative readings. Although Beethoven never published the pieces in his lifetime and is not known to have performed them, he reused their melodic and thematic material in later compositions.

Beethoven preserved the autograph score to the end of his days – perhaps an indication that the quartets meant a great deal to him. The first edition was published by Artaria in Vienna one year after his death, albeit with the pieces in a different order and with many errors in the musical text.

Bärenreiter’s scholarly performing edition of the Piano Quartets WoO 36 is edited by the Italian pianist Leonardo Miucci, a specialist in the performance practice of keyboard music from this period. The edition not only presents the correct readings, it also sheds light on the young Beethoven’s expressive notation and provides a plausible explanation for the distinction he made between dots and strokes to indicate staccato.
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