String Quartet No. 5 in F minor, Op. 9, B37

Opus number

9

Burghauser catalogue number

37

Date of composition

September 1873 – 4 October 1873

Premiere - date and place

11 January 1930, Prague

Premiere performer(s)

Kramář Quartet (Jan Buchtele, Ferdinand Karhánek, J. Lupínek, Václav Kefurt)

First edition

Breitkopf & Härtel, 1929, Leipzig

Main key

F minor

Parts / movements

1. Moderato
2. Andante con moto quasi allegretto
3. Tempo di valse
4. Finale. Allegro molto

Duration

approx. 30 min.

composition and performance history

The String Quartet in F minor was written for a semi-professional chamber ensemble grouped around the influential industrialist Joseph Porges von Portheim; Dvořák also played the viola with them when the ensemble gave private concerts. Portheim himself was a fine cellist, and the quartet also featured excellent violinist and professor at the Prague Conservatoire, Antonín Bennewitz. Musical soirees were held in Portheim’s Baroque villa in Prague’s Smíchov district (today the “Portheimka villa”). According to the testimony of music critic Václav Juda Novotný, the players were not taken with the piece, since it “lacked the style appropriate for chamber music”. The frustrated composer apparently tore out the dedication to Portheim from the title page and handed the score to Novotný, telling him that he never wanted to see it again. The manuscript was found in Novotný’s possession only after the composer’s death, in 1910, but it was many years before it came out in print. The piece was published by Breitkopf and Härtel in 1929; the quartet was performed publicly for the first time a year later. The autograph of the score is now missing.

general characteristics

This work, usually classified among Dvořák’s early quartets, is one of his most sombre and already contains the promise of his future mastery. Despite its extensive first movement, the quartet overall betrays an endeavour to condense the motivic treatment and introduce greater clarity to the thematic material. The first movement is written more or less in traditional sonata form with three subjects; it has an unusually lengthy development section, and the coda leads irregularly into the key of F major. The second movement is typical for its highly intimate atmosphere and moderate use of expressional devices. From a formal point of view, the movement is conceived as a rondo with the scheme A–B–A–C–A–B–A. Dvořák later used it as the base for his Romance in F minor. The scherzo movement is written in traditional three-part form, in which the outer segments evoke a kind of melancholic waltz, while the middle part provides a contrast with its faster tempo and transition to a major key. The fourth movement – again in sonata form – shifts the overall expression of the quartet to a somewhat brighter plane. At the very end of the work the music becomes entirely joyful in a mood which seems to anticipate the environment of Dvořák’s so-called Slavic period.