String Quartet No. 2 (Borodin)

Last updated

The String Quartet No. 2 is a string quartet in D major written by Alexander Borodin in 1881. It was dedicated to his wife Ekaterina Protopova. Some scholars, such as Borodin's biographer Serge Dianin, suggest that the quartet was a 20th anniversary gift and that it has a program evoking the couple's first meeting in Heidelberg. [1] Of its four movements, the third movement "Notturno" is the most famous.

Contents

History

Borodin wrote the string quartet quickly in 1881 while staying at the estate of his friend, the minor composer Nikolai Lodyzhensky, which was located in Zhitovo, southeast of Moscow. [2] Borodin also composed the symphonic poem In the Steppes of Central Asia the same year. The quartet premiered in that year or the next. (The external links give a more complete tale but conflict on the date.)

Music

Recordings

The Borodin Quartet in both its incarnations have specialized in this work, producing recordings of it.

The Emerson Quartet also produced a well-known recording in 1986.

The Escher String Quartet released a recording in 2018.

Many parts of the piece were adapted into the 1953 Broadway musical Kismet

The third movement serves as the score to Disney's 2006 short The Little Matchgirl.

Excerpt of the piece played in the first episode of Star Trek: Discovery .

References

  1. Garden, Edward (February 1987). "The 'programme' of Borodin's Second Quartet". The Musical Times (appears in “Alexander Borodin, 1833–87: Two Centenary Articles”). 128 (1728): 76–78. doi:10.2307/964776. ISSN   0027-4666. JSTOR   964776.
  2. St. Petersburg String Quartet [ permanent dead link ]