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String Quartet No. 2 (Villa-Lobos)

Heitor Villa-Lobos

String Quartet No. 2 is the one of a series of seventeen works in the genre by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, and was written in 1915. A performance lasts approximately twenty minutes.

History

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Villa-Lobos composed his Second Quartet in 1915, either in Rio de Janeiro or Nova Friburgo. It was first performed on 3 February 1917 by a quartet consisting of Judith Barcellos and Dagmar Noronha Gitahy, violins, Orlando Frederico, viola, and Alfredo Gomes, cello. The published score bears the indication "Op. 56".

Analysis

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As in all of Villa-Lobos's quartets except the first, there are four movements:

  1. Allegro non troppo
  2. Scherzo: Allegro
  3. Andante
  4. Allegro deciso – Presto – Prestissimo final

One writer, however, regards the Prestissimo final as a separate, fifth movement.[1]

This early quartet in Villa-Lobos's catalogue is composed according to the cyclic principles developed by César Franck and Vincent d'Indy. Franck and Debussy were two of the most important influences on Villa-Lobos's early style, and he had studied d'Indy's 1912 textbook, Cours de Composition Musicale.[2]

The composer describes the scherzo as a novelty, played in harmonics, "whose harmonies involve a syncopated melody in a context that suggests small bamboo rustic flutes (a sort of Panpipe played using the nose by the Pareci Indians of Mato Grosso)".[3]

Discography

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In order of date of recordings:

Filmography

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References

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  1. ^ Farmer 1973, pp. 23, 25–26.
  2. ^ Salles 2012, p. 25.
  3. ^ Villa-Lobos 1972, p. 229.

Cited sources

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Further reading

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