Stenhammar Quartet
Photo: Co Merz
About the concert
På svenskaBeethoven’s final quartet, Czech passion, and music inspired by throat singing.
The Stenhammar Quartet is one of Scandinavia’s leading string quartets. It has toured throughout Europe and recorded a number of acclaimed albums, praised by critics in both Swedish and international press. The quartet has appeared at Konserthuset Stockholm on several previous occasions.
As part of Konserthuset’s major Beethoven focus, the quartet takes on his very last completed work, the Sixteenth String Quartet. It is as if the music bears traces of a lifetime’s accumulated experience. The graceful opening Allegretto is followed by a furious scherzo, while the slow movement unfolds as a serene meditation in variation form. The finale opens with two short motifs marked with mottos that reveal both doubt and resolve: Muss es sein? (Must it be so?) and Es muss sein! (It must be so!).
A completely different musical landscape is encountered in Sivunittinni (The Future) by the Canadian Inuit singer and composer Tanya Tagaq. Written for the Kronos Quartet, it incorporates recordings of her throat singing. “My hope is that through this piece I can offer future musicians something of my land,” says Tanya Tagaq.
Leoš Janáček’s two string quartets rank among the most intense chamber works of the 20th century. The first quartet is inspired by Tolstoy’s The Kreutzer Sonata and moves through a tense, dramatic landscape of jealousy and passion. In contrast, we hear the second quartet here. Janáček called it Intimate Letters, and it centres on his final love, Kamila Stösslová. He was then in his seventies, and infused the music with extraordinary intimacy and ardour.
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The music
Approximate times -
Ludwig van Beethoven String Quartet No. 16 in F major op 13524 min
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Tanya Tagaq Sivunittinni, version for string quartet arr Jacob Garchik9 min
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Intermission25 min
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Leos Janácek Stråkkvartett No. 2 "Intimate Letters"25 min
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Participants
- Stenhammar Quartet