Spohr: String Quintet No. 7 / String Sextet, Op. 140 / Potpourri
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Louis Spohr (1784-1859): The Complete String Quintets, Volume Four Quintet No. 7 in G minor, Op. 144 Sextet in C major, Op. 140 Potpourri, Op. 22 Louis...
Louis Spohr (1784-1859): The Complete String Quintets, Volume Four
Quintet No. 7 in G minor, Op. 144 Sextet in C major, Op. 140 Potpourri, Op. 22
Louis Spohr was accepted during his lifetime as one of
the most important composers of early German
Romanticism whose compositions covered all the major
genres of that era. He was born in Brunswick where he
became a teenage member of the court orchestra and
developed into the leading German violinist of his day.
He held major conducting posts in Gotha (1805-12),
Vienna (1813-15), Frankfurt (1817-19) and finally
Kassel (1822-57). In between, he found time for
numerous concert tours including St Petersburg, Italy,
England (six times) and Paris. As a conductor he had
much to do with establishing the regular use of the
baton and he was also a renowned teacher, training
some two hundred violinists, conductors and
composers.
Spohr's music is a mixture of Romantic (harmony,
instrumental texture) and Classical (formal design)
tendencies and this latter side of his musical personality
played a part in his later fall from popularity as it must
have appeared old-fashioned to those brought up on the
heady sounds of Wagner, Tchaikovsky and Richard
Strauss.
The Potpourri, Op. 22, is scored for five string
instruments (solo violin and string quartet) and
therefore makes an appropriate and attractive appendix
to the Naxos set of Spohr's string quintets. It dates from
1807 when the 23-year-old Spohr doubled up as a
touring violin virtuoso and orchestral director at the
princely court of Gotha. For his tours Spohr composed
not only violin concertos and shorter pieces with
orchestra but also works suitable for salons or smaller
centres where orchestras were not available. The work
remained a favourite of the composer for many years
and he later prepared an orchestral version which he
played in London in 1820 and Paris in 1821. After a
slow introduction in which Spohr's expressive style is
displayed to the full, a Russian folk-tune is introduced
followed by three decorative variations. A modulatory
passage leads to the second tune; none other than Là ci
darem la mano from Don Giovanni by Spohr's great
hero Mozart. There are variations on this before the
Russian tune returns for the coda.
Between the composition of his Sixth String Quintet
(Naxos 8.555967) in 1845 and the Seventh in October-
November 1850, Spohr wrote his single String Sextet, in
C major, Op. 140, (March-April 1848) so it is fitting to
include it in this volume as we conclude our survey of
his seven string quintets, especially as it is one of his
finest works. Spohr was the first composer of note since
Boccherini in 1776 to tackle this combination of two
violins, two violas and two cellos and his essay sparked
off renewed interest in the medium, leading to the two
masterpieces of Brahms with a number of other
important composers soon following the example of the
two German masters.
To some extent both the Sextet and the Quintet are
coloured by Spohr's reaction to the 1848 revolution
which looked as if it might bring about a united,
democratic Germany which the composer had so long
awaited; the Sextet in the immediate euphoric
expectation of fulfilled hopes and the Quintet at the
more depressing period when the forces of repression
were regaining the upper hand. Indeed, there was
something of a family tradition that the Sextet
expressed Spohr's feeling of exultation over the events
of 1848. According to the chapters they appended to
Spohr's Autobiography: "In 1848, shortly after the
outbreak of the revolution in France, Spohr, somewhat
under the influence of ideas of liberty etc. composed his
Sextet ... on making entry of which in the list of his
compositions, he appended the words 'Written in March
and April, at the time of the glorious people's revolution
for the liberty, unity and greatness of Germany'. And
this composition, so rich in fresh melodies and truly
ethereal harmonies than almost any other work by him,
gives eloquent proof of his exalted mental state, for it
rises joyfully above the storms of the present to presage
the emergence of peace, hope and purest harmony that
he visualised would soon blossom out of momentary
strife." In fact, Spohr nowhere recorded any specific
programme for this Sextet though others have attempted
to discern one. Hans Glenewinkel, in his important
1912 study of Spohr's chamber music, remarks that the
trilling motif which appears frequently throughout the
first movement is "an expression of joy, sometimes
restrained, sometimes bursting impetuously out" while
the "elegiac undercurrent" in the coda suggests "a
prophetic vision that the spirit of freedom will be
fettered again in sleep and dreams before its definitive
release." Glenewinkel also points out that Spohr chose
to emulate Beethoven's Fifth Symphony in the
interlinking of Scherzo and Finale, and the mere
presence of Beethoven's Fifth in this context suggests
that the ideal of political freedom inspiring the Sextet is
not invalid.
The Sextet's warm and expansive opening theme,
Allegro moderato, points ahead to Brahms and this
opening movement is unified by the trilling motif which
appears again and again with the various themes.
A subsidiary trilling figure plays a prominent part in the
development in which elements from both main themes
metamorphose into a new melody. The Larghetto in
F major features a hymn-like solemnity and an effective
contrast comes from the secondary material with its
rhythmic kick. The earnest Scherzo, Moderato in
A minor, alternates with a wonderfully sonorous
A major section marked con grazia in which Spohr
writes for the first violin and first cello in octaves. After
a pause, the rising octave from the start of the Scherzo
launches the joyful C major finale, Presto. The
secondary trilling figure which featured in the first
movement's development is now integrated in the
finale's main theme. The Scherzo and its A major
section are repeated before the finale bursts in again
only for the Scherzo to make a surprise return for the
coda; then a few bars Prestissimo bring the Sextet to a
euphoric conclusion.
Despite Spohr's immediate enthusiasm for the
events of 1848 it was not long before the reactionaries
fought back and by the end of 1849 they had regained
control. During that year Spohr rejected an invitation to
perform in Breslau which was then under martial law,
stating: "I would find myself unable to breathe, let alone
to make music". He finally made the visit in the summer
of 1850 after martial law had been lifted and played the
Sextet (perhaps thereby affirming his continuing belief
in the principles of the revolution). A Breslau newspaper
reported: "...that, at his present age [66] he plays with
all the fire and energy of a young man and surmounts
the greatest difficulties with amazing vigour and
authority, is simply phenomenal; it has never happened
before!" However, the ruling prince in Kassel, Friedrich
Wilhelm, had not forgotten 1848. He had been forced to
grant a constitution, saw the new German national flag
flying in his capital and appeared in public wearing the
national cockade in his hat. Even more galling was the
fact that he had to listen to his own Kapellmeister Spohr
conducting revolutionary songs and, the final insult, felt
obliged to request Spohr to perform a popular patriotic
song. During 1850, though, his autocratic authority was
re-imposed as martial law was declared in September
while in December, a few weeks after Spohr had
completed the Seventh Quintet in G minor, op. 144,
Prussian soldiers numbering four thousand marched
into Kassel to support the crackdown. Writing to a
friend, Spohr was now in despair: "Our position is
desperate! The cowardice of the Prussian Government
has robbed us and the whole of Germany of the freedom
we have won, and unfortunately there is no hope that
this generation will see a second and, let us hope,
successful rising of the German nation. If I were not too
old, I would now emigrate to the free country of
America."
A feeling of melancholy and unease which
permeates much of the Quintet, dominates the first
movement, Allegro moderato, and even the warmly
lyrical second subject, coloratura embellishment by the
first violin and the major key conclusion, fail to dispel
it. Again, the noble E major main theme of the
Larghetto alternates with unsettled sections which
return three times to the opening melody, as if homing
in on a beacon of light. Brahms is again not far away in
the syncopated opening of the Menuetto in G minor
which emphasises once more the basic mood of the
work. The G major Trio acts as a counter-balance
though this is also absorbed into the minor tonality in
the coda. The barcarolle-style finale, Allegro, offers a
relaxed G major resolution to the tensions of earlier
events but even here the music gently fades away in
contrast to the optimism displayed at the close of the
Sextet.
The prince was soon able to indulge his revenge on
Spohr. On New Year's Day 1851 Bavarian troops
entered Kassel to reinforce the Prussians and ten
soldiers were billeted on each house "inhabited by
refractory elements". Spohr's aged father-in-law had to
suffer this iniquity and only the composer's great
international fame prevented him from receiving the
same treatment. Nevertheless, he did not escape scot
free as his ten assigned soldiers were installed at an inn
with Spohr having to foot the bill for them. After a
series of other spiteful acts by the prince, finally in
November 1857 Spohr was curtly pensioned off and
even banned from sitting with his old orchestra. The
prince even pursued Spohr beyond the grave when, in
1861, he prevented the court orchestra from holding a
graveside commemoration on the anniversary of the
composer's death which took place on 22nd October
1859. Time and history, however, contrived a
posthumous revenge for Spohr. Soon after the end of
the Second World War, Lady Mayer, researching for a
book on Spohr, visited Kassel which had been heavily
bombed in 1943 and reported: "By a strange trick of
fate, Spohr's monument still stands untouched by the
devastation from the skies. His tall figure, baton in hand
and violin under his arm, rises up opposite the ruined
palace of his patron and tormentor; a symbol of the
immortal art which in his life he so nobly served."
Keith Warsop
Chairman, Spohr Society of Great Britain
String Quintet No. 7 in G minor, Op. 144 (more info)
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I. Allegro moderato - 12:23
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II. Larghetto - 5:30
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III. Menuetto - 6:53
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IV. Finale: Allegro - 7:14
String Sextet in C major, Op. 140 (more info)
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I. Allegro moderato - 9:48
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II. Larghetto - 4:45
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III. Scherzo: Moderato - Finale: Presto - 9:25
Potpourri No. 2 in B flat major, Op. 22 (more info)
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Potpourri No. 2 in B flat major, Op. 22 - 13:30