Edvard Grieg – String Quartet No. 1, op. 27 [With score]

Composer: Edvard Hagerup Grieg (15 June 1843 — 4 September 1907)
Performers: Copenhagen String Quartet [Tutter Givskov (violin), Mogens Lydolph (violin), Mogens Bruun (viola), Asger Lund Christiansen (violoncello)]

String Quartet No. 1 in g minor, Op. 27, written in 1877-1878

00:00 – I. Un poco Andante – Allegro molto ed agitato
11:54 – II. Romanze
18:05 – III. Intermezzo
24:29 – IV. Finale. Lento – Presto al Saltarello

Grieg was, at root, a miniaturist. He did not often work in the large scale of the sonata form; his entire completed literature in this form consists of a symphony that he suppressed, one concerto, one cello sonata, three violin sonatas, and this quartet. (Later, he wrote two movements toward another one.) It was composed in 1877-1878. It is an exceedingly attractive and untroubled work, with a melodic spirit that recalls his best songs or piano works. One song-like figure in particular is used throughout. Grieg does treat his material in sonata fashion, but not rigorously. There is a feeling of Norwegian peasant dances in the scherzo, while the finale trots merrily with a saltarello rhythm. It is, in short, a lovable work, heartwarming in the way that Grieg’s music so often is.
The first performance of the quartet took place in Cologne in October 1878, by a quartet led by the work’s dedicatee, violinist Robert Heckmann.
[allmusic.com]

Original Audio: https://youtu.be/pZZkxLY9uqc

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