
Designed as a companion volume to the author's acclaimed earlier study, The Piano Trio, this book surveys the development of the piano quartet and quintet from their beginnings in the mid-eighteenth century to the present day. Developments during the first four decades of the nineteenth century resulted not only in Schubert's renowned Trout Quintet, but also in works of much brilliance by Dussek, Hummel, Weber, and others in which the piano predominates in a concerto-like role. Subsequently, Schumann's epoch-making quintet of 1842 initiated a broadly "symphonic" style, with large-scale structures and closely integrated textures, which was taken up by many later composers, including Brahms, Dvorak, Cesar Franck, Faure, and Elgar. The author also examines the numerous changes in the nature of the genres which have occurred in recent times, and gives special consideration to a number of works by leading twentieth-century composers, in which "mixed" media are formed by combining wind instruments with the normal strings-and-piano ensembles.
This book investigates the historical evolution, structural development, and changing instrumental scoring of the piano quartet and quintet from the mid-eighteenth century to the modern era. Basil Smallman, a recognized scholar in chamber music, utilizes a comparative analytical framework to trace how these genres transitioned from concerto-like piano dominance to the integrated, symphonic textures popularized by nineteenth-century composers. The text provides a systematic examination of how shifting aesthetic priorities and instrumentation choices have redefined the chamber music landscape over three centuries.
What You Will Find
Experts and musicologists regard this text as a foundational reference for understanding the structural evolution of chamber music ensembles. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a comprehensive resource for students and performers seeking to understand the technical nuances of the repertoire.
Page Count:
208
Publication Date:
1994-12-08
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0198163746
ISBN-13:
9780198163749
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