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Canadian University Music Review
Revue de musique des universités canadiennes
Music about Music: the First String Quartet, Opus 37, in C, by
Karol Szymanowski
Paul Cadrin
Numéro 7, 1986
URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1014092ar
DOI : https://doi.org/10.7202/1014092ar
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2291-2436 (numérique)
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Cadrin, P. (1986). Music about Music: the First String Quartet, Opus 37, in C, by
Karol Szymanowski. Canadian University Music Review / Revue de musique des
universités canadiennes, (7), 171–187. https://doi.org/10.7202/1014092ar
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MUSIC ABOUT MUSIC:
THE FIRST STRING QUARTET,
OPUS 37, IN C,
BY KAROL SZYMANOWSKI
Paul Cadrin
In their recent book about Stravinsky, the Dutch composer Louis
Andriessen and critic Elmer Schonberger propose the following allegory
for music:
We have to imagine an art of painting that has its roots in one single
painting... That one painting portrays the last tree and the last landscape. After the completion of that painting, the tree was cut down and
the landscape devastated. Since then, there were no more trees or
landscapes to be seen. But that painting inspired other painters to paint
trees and landscapes. The resulting paintings, in their turn, inspired a
new generation of painters. In that way, it is possible that the present
practitioners of this school paint trees and landscapes which, it must
be said, in no way resemble the last tree and the last landscape. This
school of painting is similar to what happens in music. Just as treeand-landscape paintings portray other tree-and-landscape paintings,
music portrays other music.
[Andriessen and Schonberger 1983: 30]
If this view of music is exact, in what way, one may ask, is
Szymanowski's First String Quartet different from any other piece of
music? In what particular way can it be said to be "music about
music"? Careful analysis suggests that, within the Quartet, the evolution of the composer's style, from his upbringing in the hotbed of
German late romanticism to his discovery of the French-Russian
avant-garde in 1913, is retraced.
171
The First String Quartet, Opus 37, in C was composed in 1917, at the
peak of the composer's most creative period. Before the work was
completed, however, the Szymanowski family estate, in Ukraine, was
razed to the ground in the October Revolution. The two compositions
on which Szymanowski was working at the time, the Quartet and the
cantatazyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA
Agave, were never to be completed as planned. Of the projected four movements of the Quartet, three were later revised for
publication. The original plan was to include a sonata-allegro, a
scherzo, a theme and variations for the slow movement, and a fugue
for the finale. According to Michafowski [1967: 137], the scherzo was
reworked to become the last movement, presumably by integrating elements of fugal writing within the structure and character of a scherzo.
On the other hand, the first movement is preceded with a rather elaborate slow introduction, a most unusual feature in the quartet literature
of the time, possibly as a means of compensating for the missing fourth
movement.
Certain aspects of the Quartet stand out as strangely anachronistic with
respect to other works of the same creative period, for example, the
Third Symphony, Opus 27 (1914-16), the First Violin Concerto, Opus
35 (1916), or the Third Piano Sonata, Opus 36 (1917). No indication
of tonality had appeared in the title of a composition since the Second
Piano Sonata, in A major (1911). The Quartet was to be the last work
to carry such an indication. This suggests the composer's awareness
that this work belongs to a different stylistic lineage. As noted by
Alistair Wightman:
The progressive disruption of tonality, a process well under way in the
earlier war-time works, seems to have been arrested in the first of the
Quartets.
[Wightman 1972: 94]
To a certain extent, this anachronism could be credited to the composer's discomfort with the resources of the string quartet. At the age
of 34, this was his first venture into the medium. The only comparable
work written previously, the Piano Trio, opus 16, had been withdrawn
172
after its first performance, in 1909. In a letter to Szymanowski dated
24 July 1917, the violinist Pawel Kochanski had this to say in reaction
to the composer's announcement that he was writing a quartet (the
composer's letter is lost):
It is strange how one changes. Do you remember, you used to dislike
the quartet, to say it could not give you full satisfaction, not enough
sound?
[ChyMska 1982: 506]*
In addition to his discomfort with the quartet as an ensemble,
Szymanowski apparently had to cope with a disinclination to write
works of "pure" music, that is, music which is not based on a text or
inspired by a programme. Even the Second Symphony and the First
Violin Concerto are known to have programmatic backgrounds,2 not
to mention the fact that more than half of his total output consists of
songs, a substantial corpus little known outside Poland. As far as we
know, however, the Quartet is "pure" music.
Lacking an extra-musical programme to guide his inspiration,
Szymanowski reckons with his own evolution as a composer, from his
youthful fervour for the German romanticism of Wagner, Strauss, and
Reger, through his discovery of French impressionism, particularly of
the music of Ravel, to his recent infatuation with the aesthetics of the
French-Russian avant-garde. The manifestation of each of these influences will now be traced in the Quartet.
1
"...dziwne to, ze sic tak zmienia, pamiçtasz jak nie lubiteé kwartety,
mowifes, ze to nie zadawalnia Ciebie, ze za mafo brzmienia?" The author is
grateful to Mr. Leszek M. Karpinski, of the University of British Columbia,
for his help with the translation of this excerpt from the correspondence.
2
On the Second Symphony, see Rubinstein (1973: 376); on the First Concerto,
see Samson (1980:114-120).
173
The dominant influence on Szymanowski's musical education, from his
early training at home and in Elisavetgrad under Gustav Neuhaus to
his studies with Zawirski and Noskowski in Warsaw, was that of
German late romanticism. His Second Symphony, opus 19, in Bb major (1910) and his Second Piano Sonata, opus 21, in A major (1911)
mark the culmination of this influence. The structure, harmonic
vocabulary, and contrapuntal processes of these two works invite a
comparison with Reger, while the orchestration of the Symphony is
clearly derived from Wagner and Strauss.
The influence of Wagner on the Quartet is very diffuse. In one instance, however, it comes close to the surface. In the exposition of the
first movement, the link between the transition and the beginning of the
second subject group (mm. 42-44) is based on the Tristan chord and its
resolution (see example 1). The complex contrapuntal ornamentation
does not entirely obscure the underlying progression. The relationship
with the Prelude is further confirmed by the fact that the dominant
harmony on E of m. 45 moves up a semitone to an F-Major triad at
m. 47, followed at m. 49 by motion to a D-major chord in first inversion, as in mm. 16-18 of the Prelude.
With the exception of local events of the kind just described, the influence of Wagner on the Quartet is not readily discernible. It is distilled
through that of later German composers, particularly Reger. The five
string quartets published by this composer (Opus 54, no 1 and 2; opus
74; opus 109; opus 121) are among his most durable achievements.
Szymanowski is likely to have known these works, and their influence
is felt in many aspects of his own quartet.
The plan initially chosen by Szymanowski is a case in point. The theme
and variations for the slow movement is a staple of the music of Reger.
It is found in four of the five quartets. In the first and fourth, it is
coupled with a fugue in the last movement, as in Szymanowski's plan.
Furthermore, the theme of the third movement of the Fourth Quartet,
opus 109, is titled "Canzona", while Szymanowski's theme is marked
174
"in modo d'una canzone". In all cases, the final fugues are spirited
virtuoso movements based on unequivocally tonal subjects, in strong
contrast with the intricate chromatic lacework of the foregoing variations.
Curiously, in modifying his plan to accommodate a three movement
scheme, Szymanowski may again have been following a precedent set
by Reger. The latter's Second Quartet, opus 54, number 2, is in three
movements, the second and third of which are respectively a theme and
variations and a fugue. This was also the plan chosen by Szymanowski
for the two major works of his German period, the Second Symphony
and the Second Piano Sonata.
These similarities of structure are corroborated by similarities of tonalharmonic language. These include a harmonic vocabulary dominated
by four-note chords of the dominant-seventh, diminished seventh,
half-diminished seventh, German and French sixth types. Furthermore,
these four-note chords occur in a tonal syntax which is subject to enharmonic reinterpretation as well as to so-called irregular resolutions,
creating a constant tonal flux in which each progression is locally
justifiable (see example 2). In contrast with the prevailing tonalharmonic system just described, there are short segments in which the
juxtaposition of consonant triads belonging to different diatonic collections produces an effect which I would call "consonant
chromaticism" (see example 3). Instances of this tonal-harmonic idiom
are found in Wagner, for example, in KurwenaPs satirical song, in Act
I Scene 2 ofzyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA
Tristan (see example 4).
In spite of the frequency of harmonies belonging to the dominant
family, perfect authentic cadences are rare and reserved for major
punctuations. In the Szymanowski Quartet, the only perfect authentic
cadence found in the course of a movement closes the theme, the
Canzona, of the second movement (m. 10). Finally, the use of tonally
175
unequivocal, almost Handelian, fugue subjects for the last movement
is a feature of the tonal-harmonic language which has already been
noted (see example 5).
With the exception of the last, all the traits mentioned in the preceding
paragraphs are found in the first two movements of the Szymanowski
Quartet. In fact, they are not found beyond the second variation of the
middle movement. The presence of the fugue subject in this list may
be credited to the reorganization of materials subsequent to the
adoption of the three-movement scheme. It is therefore plausible that
Szymanowski drew his inspiration for the overall scheme of the
Quartet, as well as for the tonal-harmonic language of the first half,
from Reger.
A set of variations lends itself particularly well to the unfolding of
stylistic transformations. The second movement of the First Quartet is
a good case in point. If the theme and first variation are reminiscent
of the music of Reger, the second and third variations are more intimately related to the style which Szymanowski evolved after 1913,
particularly in his works for violin and piano, thezyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcb
Notturno e
Tarentella, opus 28, and the three Mythes, opus 30.
These works display stylistic features which are more easily related to
the works of the French impressionists than to those of the German
school. In contrast with the relentless tonal flux which characterizes the
music of Reger, this music juxtaposes static planes of tonally enigmatic
materials. For example, tonal fluctuation around a pedal combined
with vacillations of the metric framework are found in the beginning
of the second variation of the Quartet as well as at the beginning of the
third movement of the Ravel Quartet (see example 6). 3 The unusual
texture of the third variation, with its tremolando accompaniment in
3
In order to understand the metricfluctuationat the beginning of the second
variation, one must note that the change of metre from 3/4 to 6/8, at m.
28, becomes perceptible only with the upbeat to m. 31.
176
the lower register supporting static melodic motives, is also reminiscent
of Ravel, particularly of his works for piano likezyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXW
Jeux d'eau (see
example 7).
The prevailing harmonic sonorities of the third variation belong to the
whole-tone family. The third movement, on the other hand, prominently features chords of the ninth, eleventh, and thirteenth. This
marks a significant departure from the harmonic vocabulary of the first
movement described above, a mutation which may be credited in good
part to Szymanowski's discovery of French impressionism.
Beyond a fugal exposition at the beginning of two of its principal
sections (mm. 8-19 and 78-97), the third movement is not a fugue. The
prevalent texture is homophonic, rather than polyphonic, and the
emphasis is on the repetition of motives over tense harmonic conglomerates, rather than on imitative writing. Again, we are reminded that
this movement was meant to amalgamate fugal procedures with the
structure and character of a scherzo. Superficially, the most striking
feature of this movement is the presence of four different, concurrent
key signatures. In that respect, it is unique in the works of
Szymanowski and, to this writer's knowledge, the only example of its
kind in the string quartet repertoire. While this movement is most
explicit and systematic in its use of superimposed tonalities, other works
of the period 1914-1917 had already made passing use of this technique,
for example, "Tantis le bouffon", the second of the three Masques,
opus 34, for piano (see example 8).
Although one may find glimmers of bitonality in the music of Richard
Strauss, particularly in Salome, it came to be identified, after 1911,
with the French-Russian avant-garde.4 Even before Darius Milhaud
made himself the champion of polytonality, Ravel, Koechlin, Casella,
de Falla, Roussel, and, of course, Stravinsky were associated with this
* See Koechlin (1925: 696-738).
177
trend in the years immediately preceding World War I.5 In his deliberate
attempt at breaking the shackles of German romanticism, Szymanowski
was likely to be attracted by a musical current which was most explicit
in its reaction against the influence of Wagner. The idiom of that
avant-garde was polytonality.
Szymanowski's admiration for Stravinsky, first expressed in a letter to
Stefan Spiess dated 14 October 1913, was later to materialize in an
article published in 1924.6 Nevertheless, one would have a hard time
finding specific aspects of his new style which would be creditable to the
influence of Stravinsky in particular. In the words of Alistair
Wightman:
Stravinsky's influence was not so much direct as catalytic.
Szymanowski's own form of impressionism, for want of a better word,
Petrouchka or Le Sacre du
has none of the primitivism of eitherzyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQ
printemps.
[Wightman 1982: xvii]
In adopting a strictly polytonal scheme for his third movement, therefore, Szymanowski was experimenting with a technique whose bases he
was likely to have discovered during his trip to Paris before the War,
but which he stringently carried to extremes for which he had no
prototype of comparable extent or complexity.
A further indication of the catalytic influence of Stravinsky may be
found in the contrasting section, corresponding to the trio in a regular
scherzo. This short section (mm. 138-188) is based on a rousing melody
propelled by a lilting accompaniment evocative of folk dance music (see
example 9). While this author has been unable to find in Polish folk
5
While these composers are of various ethnic origins, they were all active in
Paris at the time.
6
"Igor Stravinsky," Warszawianka, 1924, no 7 (Maciejewski 1967: 130).
178
music a plausible source for this theme, there is no doubt that a stylized
dance tune of this kind marks a turning point in the evolution of the
composer. It is a foretaste of the use of explicitely Polish folk material
found in the works written after 1920.
It would be most unfortunate if the emphasis laid on influences in this
paper would leave the reader with the impression that Szymanowski was
a composer of meagre creative aptitudes. While many creators of great
music have thought it was important to learn from other composers,
Szymanowski felt this was a particularly urgent responsibility for Polish
composers. This is expressed in a remarkable way in an article published in 1920,7 which may be read as his aesthetic credo:
national in its Polish characteristics but not falter in
Let our music bezyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCB
striving to attain universality, let it be national but not provincial...Let
all the new ideas and thoughts which are bora into the world today come
to us and enrich our minds, for this is a luxury that we have dispensed
of for so many decades.
[Maciejewski and Aprahamian 1970: 91]
Fifty years after his death on 29 March 1937, the significance of
Szymanowski, both in his own time and today, is just coming to light.
Here is a composer who could let his music portray other musics insofar
as this would not imperil the unique qualities of his style. The First
String Quartet, opus 37, sometimes considered to be of marginal
significance, appears to hold a key to an understanding of this style.
7
Quoted from "Thoughts on Polish criticism in music today," in The Warsaw
New Literary Review July 1920, translated and edited by B.M. Maciejewski.
179
REFERENCES
ANDRIESSEN, L. & E. SCHÔNBERGER
1983: "Ars imitatio artis",zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIH
Key Notes 18/2: 30-31; English translation of an excerpt
from Het apollinisch uurwek (Amsterdam: Bezige Bij, 1983).
CHYLltiSKA, T., éd.
1982: Karol Szymanowski: Korrespondencja, volume 1 (1903-1919). Krakow:
PWM Edition.
KOECHLIN, C.
1925: "Evolution de Pharmonie: Période contemporaine depuis Bizet et César
Franck jusqu'à nos jours," in Encyclopédie de la musique et dictionnaire
du Conservatoire, 2 deuxième partie, volume 1, pp. 591-760. Edited by
Albert Lavignac and Lionel de la Laurencie. Paris: Delagrave.
MACIEJEWSKI, B.M.
1967: Karol Szymanowski: His Life and Music. Foreward by Felix Aprahamian.
London: Poets' and Painters' Press.
MACIEJEWSKI, B.M. and F. APRAHAMIAN
1970: Karol Szymanowski and Jan Smeterlin: Correspondence and Essays.
Translated, edited, and annotated by B.M. Maciejewski and F.
Aprahamian. London: Allegro Press.
MICHALOWSKI, K.
1967: Karol Szymanowski 1882-1937: Katalog tematyczny dziel i bibiiografia
[Thematic Catalogue of Works and Bibiliography]. Krakow: PWM Edition.
RUBINSTEIN, A.
1973: My Young Years. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
SAMSON, J.
1980: The Music of Szymanowski. London: Kahn & Averill.
WIGHTMAN, A.
1972: "The Music of Karol Szymanowski." Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation.
University of York.
1982: Preface to vol. 8 (Piano Works) of Karol Szymanowski: Complete Edition.
Teresa Chylinska general editor. Krakow: PWM.
180
Example
1
Comparison of a) mm. 42-49 of the first movement of the Quartet with b) mm. 2-3 and 16-18 of the
delude tozyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA
Tristan und Isolde by Wagner.
i c) Copyrignt 1925 by Unlversaî Edition A.G., Wien
Copyright renewed
All rights reserved
Used by permission of European American Music Distributors
Corporation, sole Canadian agent for Universal Edition
example 2
Comparison of a) mm. 49-53 of the first movement of the
Quartet with b) mm. 12-14 of the first movement of the
First Quartet, opus 54, no.l, by Reger.
182
ÛT) Copyright 1925 by Universal Edition A.G., Wien
Copyright renewed
All rignts reserved
Used by permission of European American Music Distributors
Corporation, sole Canadian agent for Universal Edition
Comparison of a) mm. 12-13 of the first movement of the
Quartet with b) mm. 96-101 of the first movement of the
Fourth Quartet, opus 109, in Eb major, by Reger.
Tristan und Isolde, Act I, sc. 2.
183
Sxanrole
5
Comparison of a) mm. 8-10 of the third movement of the Quartet with b) mm. 1-6 of the fourth
movement of the Fourth Quartet, opus 109, in Eb major, by Reger.
Comparison of a) mm. 23-30 of the second movement of
the Quartet with b) mm. 1-13 of the third movement of the
Quartet in F major by Ravel.
185
Comparison of a) mm. 47-52 of the second movement of
the Quartet with b) mm. 51-52 ofzyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSR
Jeux d'eau by Ravel.
186
Mm. 172-177 of the third movement of the Quartet.