Dvorak: String Quintet, Op. 97 & String Sextet, Op. 48 Jerusalem Quartet

Cover Dvorak: String Quintet, Op. 97 & String Sextet, Op. 48

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
19.01.2018

Label: Harmonia Mundi

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Jerusalem Quartet

Composer: Antonin Dvorak (1814–1894)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Antonín Dvořák (1841 - 1904): String Sextet, Op. 48:
  • 1I. Allegro moderato07:51
  • 2II. Dumka (Elegie). Poco allegretto06:57
  • 3III. Furiant. Presto - Trio04:17
  • 4IV. Finale. Tema con variazioni - Allegretto grazioso, quasi andantino08:36
  • String Quintet No. 3, Op. 97:
  • 5I. Allegro non tanto09:16
  • 6II. Allegro vivo - Minore. Un poco meno mosso05:42
  • 7III. Larghetto10:00
  • 8IV. Finale. Allegro giusto08:14
  • Total Runtime01:00:53

Info for Dvorak: String Quintet, Op. 97 & String Sextet, Op. 48



The Jerusalem Quartet explores two aspects of Dvořák’s chamber music: one of the first big successes in the genre of a Bohemian composer who now enjoyed a well-established reputation in Europe (op.48), and one of the masterpieces from the years of American exile which brought him worldwide fame (op.97).

He had just made his decisive breakthrough. More or less overnight, Antonín Dvorák, now thirty-six years old, had risen to the front rank of European composers – and had done so with works that bore their national, popular aura in the title.

The first book of Slavonic Dances for piano four hands, written within a few weeks at the beginning of the year 1878, had become a genuine hit with the public, even beyond the borders of Bohemia, and seemed to be wrought from the very stuff that was henceforth to be the main source of musical invention for this tirelessly searching mind. The resulting mood was euphoric, the creative urge immensely productive. Just a few months later, in May 1878, Dvorák explored the question of how far the style-defining characteristics of the dances could be transferred to other genres in the formal tradition of the sonata and the symphony, and especially his preferred medium of chamber music. Finally, after only a fortnight, the finished score of a string sextet in A major lay on his desk, answering that question not just adequately but in highly impressive fashion.

On the one hand, the four-movement work, premiered by the augmented Joachim Quartet in Berlin at the end of July 1879 and published by Simrock shortly thereafter, confronts the influence of the Austro-German school in a very responsible, indeed emphatic manner. That is so in respect of both its alignment with formal structural principles of a classical nature and, above all, its strong emphasis on motivic-thematic work. It is unmistakable how closely Dvorák sticks in his op.48 to the example of Johannes Brahms when it comes to underpinning the largely textbook sonata form of the opening Allegro moderato with a complex web of innumerable little motivic derivatives, thanks to which each subsidiary voice is assigned a structural value in its own right. Thus the choice of forces for his ‘test piece’ (it was to remain the only one of its kind in Dvorák’s catalogue of works) with regard to the two string sextets of his revered colleague, eight years his elder, was probably no coincidence. On the other hand, it is the spontaneity of inspiration that captivates. ‘That fellow has more ideas than all of us’, a dumbfounded Brahms is said to have declared in 1875 when a score by this previously unknown Bohemian came into his hands for the first time. ‘Anyone else could pick up their main themes from his rejects.’ And years later, on the occasion of a Viennese performance of Dvorák’s Sextet, it was Brahms again who enthused to his friend the composer and conductor Richard Heuberger over its ‘wonderful invention, freshness and beauty of sound’, observing ‘I always have the feeling that people don’t admire this piece enough’.

Veronika Hagen, viola
Gary Hoffman, cello
Jerusalem Quartet


The Jerusalem Quartet
was founded in 1993, and began its training in Jerusalem, under the direction of the violinist Avi Abramovitch. From 1999 to 2001 the quartet received support from the BBC (as BBC New Generation Artists), then in 2003 it was the recipient of the first Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award.

The Jerusalem Quartet is now a regular guest in the world’s leading concert halls, notably in the United States where it is increasingly present. It performs with such artists as Alexander Melnikov, Lawrence Power, and Sharon Kam.

The quartet’s discography on harmonia mundi has won many international awards. Its interpretation of Schubert’s ‘Death and the Maiden’ Quartet won a Diapason d’Or of the Year in 2008 and an ECHO Klassik award in 2009, while its most recent release, Schumann’s Piano Quintet and Quartet, received distinctions from BBC Music Magazine, Scherzo, and Télérama.

Booklet for Dvorak: String Quintet, Op. 97 & String Sextet, Op. 48

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