String Quartet No. 14 (Villa-Lobos)

Villa-Lobos in June 1952

String Quartet No. 14 is the one of a series of seventeen works in the medium by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, and was written in 1953. A performance lasts approximately seventeen minutes.

History

Villa-Lobos composed his Fourteenth Quartet in Rio de Janeiro in 1953 on a commission from the University of Michigan for the Stanley Quartet (Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violins; Robert Courte, viola; Oliver Edel, cello), to whom the score is dedicated. The Stanley Quartet gave the first performance in Ann Arbor as part of the sixty-ninth concert of the University of Michigan School of Music's 1953–54 season on Tuesday, 9 March 1954. It was preceded on the programme by Haydn's Quartet in C Major, Op. 74, No. 1, and followed by Beethoven's Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 130 (Villa-Lobos, sua obra 1972, 87; University of Michigan 1954, unpaginated).

Analysis

As with most of Villa-Lobos's quartets, there are four movements:

  1. Allegro
  2. Andante
  3. Scherzo (Vivace)
  4. Molto allegro

All four movements of this quartet are in ternary, ABA form (Gutiérrez 2006, 194).

The second movement is nostalgic in manner, opening with a sixteen-bar, desolate, chromatic, and atonal fugato. The central section is strongly contrasted, using a theme in a tonal, popular-music style (Gutiérrez 2006, 137–38).

Discography

Chronological, by date of recording.

Filmography

References

Further reading

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