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Organization providing concert series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Sociedad de Cuartetos de Madrid (Madrid Quartet Society), 1863–1894, was an organization that provided concert series with an educational approach. They attempted to save chamber music from fading into oblivion since Italian opera and Zarzuela dominated Spanish concert life. Founded by violinist Jesús de Monasterio and pianist Juan María Guelbenzu Fernández in 1863, this society contributed significantly to the circulation and interest of chamber music in the Iberian Peninsula. The quality of the music, over their thirty-one seasons, was always praised. They also exposed a lack of interest by the majority of the Spanish composers for the chamber music genre during this time. Despite their great perseverance and increasing success, the society's activities concluded on January 5, 1894, due to health problems that troubled Monasterio for several seasons prior. The Society of Quartets represents the first serious and lasting initiative for the circulation of chamber music in 19th-century Spain. Their activities carried out through thirty-one concert seasons ( or "sessions" as defined them) in Madrid as well as other concerts offered outside the capital.
The idea for this chamber music institution came from Monasterio, who had been a successful pupil of Charles de Bériot at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels. His distinguished career included the post of honorary violinist of the Capilla Real and the appointment as a professor of the Madrid Conservatory. After a successful European tour that included performances of string quartets of Beethoven and Schubert, Monasterio decided to return to his home country to initiate a quartet society in Madrid. Monasterio initially conceived this organization exclusively for strings, but his former tutor Basilio Montoya convinced him to collaborate with the Spanish pianist Guelbenzu. After his studies in Paris, Guelbenzu became a respected pianist who had befriended Chopin, Liszt, Giacomo Meyerbeer, and Sigismund Thalberg. The inclusion of Guelbenzu to this organization expanded their repertoire possibilities to include solo and chamber works for piano.
The long history of society can be distinguish in two periods:
First period (1863-1884): The society offers its concert seasons in a rehearsal room of the Madrid Conservatory. The society was officially formed by Jesús de Monasterio (first violin), Rafael Pérez (second violin), Tomás Lestán (violist), Ramón Rodriguez Castellanos (cellist), Juan María Guelbenzu (pianist) and Basilio Montoya (treasurer). During this period, the concerts were offered on Sundays at 2:00 pm every 15 days or weekly (since 1866).
Second period (1884-1894): The concert seasons took place in the "Salon Romero" in Madrid. After the death of Guelbenzu (pianist) and Basilio Montoya (treasurer), on October 18, 1884; the society wrote new statutes to their establishment. Those were the formal distinction the original String Quartet (Monasterio, Pérez, Lestán and Castellanos) and the new conditions for contracts of external musicians and the new rates for the public. The society also programmed a concert without piano music in which a crown of flowers was placed in a grand piano as tribute to Guelbenzu's career. At this point, concerts were offered on Fridays from 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm weekly.
The founding string quartet consisted of members of the Teatro Real, principal violist Tomás Lestán and the concertmaster Rafael Pérez as second violin. The cellist was Ramón Rodríguez Castellano, who was later replaced by the Franco-Polish cellist Víctor Mirecki. Other performers included pianists Mariano Vázquez Gómez (1863) Adolfo de Quesada (1868), the violist and composer Miguel Carreras (1869), clarinetist Antonio Romero (1875), cellist Agustín Rubio (1881), violinist Enrique Arbós (1882), and several collaborations with faculty from the Conservatory.[1]
The concert seasons (referred to as sessions) occurred between November and March. Some extraordinary series of concerts were also offered in April. In their first year, there were only four sessions. From the second year onward, an average of 6 sessions was offered per season. This figure was considered insufficient by critics and the public, which is the reason the company decided to provide extraordinary sessions.
This chamber music society performed a varied repertoire of 173 works by 33 different composers. In their first five seasons, however, programs mainly consisted of works by Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Mozart, and Haydn with an interesting inclusion of the String Quartet Op.74 No.1 by Louis Spohr in season two. This choice of repertoire reflects their educational mission to expose the German models on the chamber music genre, specifically those of First Viennese School. The evolution in variety of composers also encourages the inclusion of Spanish composers. In their sixth season, they dedicated a concert to works by Spanish composers, including M. Adalid, R. Pérez, M. Allú. Additionally, two works by the Cuban composer N. Ruiz Espadero were performed in the following season. Through the 1870s their repertoire added works by Onslow, Anton Rubinstein, Joseph Mayseder, G. Verdi, Joachim Raff, and even Giuseppe Tartini. The decade of the 1880s completely renewed their repertoire. Their programs included works that were new to audiences in Madrid, such as Schumann's String Quartets Op. 41, Schubert's String Quartet D.810 "Death and the Maiden", Grieg's Violin Sonatas Op. 8, Chopin Op. 3, Dvorak's Piano Quintet Op. 18, Scarlatti L. 390, Svendsen Op. 26. More obscure composers included Arriaga, Godard, Delsart, Nawrátil, and Monasterio himself. Their concert series concluded with a performance of Tchaikovsky's String Quartet No.1, Op.11, which was applauded with utmost respect and admiration.[1]
The most important source for their repertoire are the concert programs located in the archives of the library of the Royal Superior Conservatory of Music of Madrid. They include the date of the season, the time, the season number corresponding to that season, the type of concert, the venue, and sometimes the catalog of the works.[2] However, it is known that they also performed concerts in addition to their concert seasons, performing in different cities such as Valladolid, Burgos, Bilbao, Barcelona, Zaragoza, Asturias, and even outside of Spain.[1] Each concert usually consisted of three works. From the news papers and musical press it is known that advertising circulated in Madrid days before the start of the concert season.[3]
The following table contains information of the works presented by the society. Most of the society's concerts introduced introduce new works to their repertoire, but previous works were often repeated. The following information reflects only the first performance of each work, and these are not reflecting the entirety of the program presented on each of the concert seasons.
1st Concert Season | 2nd Concert Season | 3rd Concert Season | 4th Concert Season | 5th Concert Season | 6th Concert Season | 7th Concert Season |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 1, 1863
Beethoven: Quartet in D, Op. 18 Beethoven: Sonata in F, Op. 24 Haydn: Quartet in G, Op 77 February 8, 1863 Haydn: Quartet in C, op 76 Mozart: Sonata in F, K.376 February 22, 1863 Beethoven: Trio in C, minor op 1 Mendelssohn: Quartet in D, op 44 |
November 15, 1863
Beethoven: Quartet in F, Op. 18 Haydn: Quartet in D minor, Op. 76 Mozart: Quartet in G minor, K. 478 November 29, 1863 Beethoven Sonata in E-flat, Op. 12 Mozart: Quintet in G minor, K. 516 Spohr: Quartet in A minor, Op. 74 January 10, 1864 Beethoven: Sonata in A minor, Op. 47 January 24, 1864 Beethoven: Quartet in D, (arr. Piano Sonata) Op. 28 Mozart: Sonata in A, K. 526 |
November 20, 1864
Haydn: Quartet in A, Op. 55 Mozart: Sonata in B-flat, K.454 December 4, 1864 Mendelssohn: Quartet in E-flat, Op. 12 December 18, 1864 Beethoven: Septet in E-flat, Op. 20 January 8, 1865 Mozart: Quartet in D minor, K. 421 January 22, 1865 Haydn: Sonata in G, HXI 73 |
January 28, 1866
Beethoven: Sonata in C, minor Op. 30 February 4, 1866 Beethoven: Quartet in E minor, Op 59 February 18, 1866 Beethoven: Sonata in C minor, Op. 10 Mozart: Quintet in C minor, K.406 March 4, 1866 Haydn: Quartet in D, Op. 64 March 11, 1866 Beethoven: Sonata in C minor, Op. 13 |
November 25, 1866
Beethoven: Sonata in A-flat, Op. 26 Haydn: Quartet in F, Op. 77 December 2, 1866 Beethoven: Trio in C minor, Op. 9 December 16, 1866 Mendelssohn: Trio in D minor, Op. 49 January 27, 1867 Mozart: Quartet in B-flat, K. 458 February 3, 1867 Beethoven: Romance in F, Op. 50 Mendelssohn: Caprice in A minor, Op. 33 April 13, 1867 Haydn: The Seven Last Words of Christ |
November 17, 1867
Haydn: Quartet in G, Op. 76 Mendelssohn: Quartet in E, Op. 44 December 15, 1867 Mozart: Quartet in D, K.499 Beethoven: Sonata in C-sharp minor, Op. 27 February 16, 1867 M. Adalid: Sonata in the G R. Pérez: Quartet in E-flat M. Sánchez Allú: Sonata in D |
December 6, 1868
Beethoven: Sonata in A, Op. 2 Haydn: Quartet in G minor, Op. 74 December 27, 1868 Mozart: Quartet in D, K. 575 Espadero: Melody in B-flat, "La caída de las hojas" Espadero: Sonata in E-flat January 10, 1869 Weber: Sonata in D minor, Op. 49 January 24, 1869 Mendelssohn: Sonata in B-flat, Op. 45 January 31, 1869 Beethoven: Sonata in B-flat, Op. 22 |
8th Concert Season | 9th Concert Season | 10th Concert Season | 11th Concert Season | 12th Concert Season | 13th Concert Season | 14th Concert Season |
January 2, 1870
Haydn: Quartet in G, Op. 64 January 9, 1870 Beethoven: Sonata in E-flat, Op. 7 January 30, 1870 Mozart: Quintet in D, K.596 February 30, 1870[clarification needed] Beethoven Quartet in A, Op 18 |
December 11, 1870
Haydn: Quartet in B-flat, Op. 76 Mendelssohn: Romance without words in E, Op. 19 December 18, 1870 Onslow: Quartet in B-flat, Op. 21 January 8, 1871 Beethoven: Quartet in E-flat, Op. 74 January 29, 1871 Mozart: Sonata in F, K.497 |
January 7, 1872
Mendelssohn: Quartet in F minor, Op. 2 January 14, 1872 Beethoven: Quartet in B-flat, Op. 18 January 21, 1872 Schumann: Quintet in E-flat, Op. 44 March 30, 1872 Guelbenzu: Two Piano Compositions |
December 1, 1872
Haydn: Quartet in D, Op. 50 December 8, 1872 Mendelssohn: Quartet in E, Op 81 December 15, 1872 Beethoven: Quartet in C minor, Op. 18 |
January 18, 1874
Beethoven: Quartet in E-flat, (arr. Quintet) Op. 16 February 8, 1874 Beethoven: Sonata in F minor, Op. 57 Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64 |
November 5, 1874
Haydn: Quartet in C Op. 74 November 29, 1874 Beethoven: Quartet in G, Op. 18 Mozart: Sonata in C minor, K. 457 January 3, 1875 Mozart: Fantasia in C minor, K. 475 Rubinstein: Sonata in A minor, Op. 19 January 10, 1875 Mozart: Quintet in A, K. 581 |
November 5, 1875
Mendelssohn: Quartet in B minor, Op. 3 November 12, 1875 Rubinstein: Trio in F, Op. 15 January 2, 1876 Beethoven: Trio in E-flat, Op. 1 Mendelssohn Quintet in B-flat, Op. 87 February 13, 1876 Beethoven: Serenade in D, Op. 8 |
15th Concert Season | 16th Concert Season | 17th Concert Season | 18th Concert Season | 19th Concert Season | 20th Concert Season | 21st Concert Season |
November 31, 1876
Verdi: Quartet in E minor Op. 31 |
November 4, 1877
Mayseder: Trio in A-flat, Op. 32 November 11, 1877 Mozart: Quartet in F, K. 590 December 2, 1877 Mendelssohn: Sonata in D, Op. 58 |
November 10, 1878
Beethoven: Trio in C minor, Op. 66 December 29, 1878 Mendelssohn: Song without Words Op. 109 Mozart: Sonata in D, K.576 Tartini: Adagio from 8th Violin Sonata |
December 7, 1879
Mendelssohn: Trio in C minor, Op. 66 December 21, 1879 Beethoven: Quartet in F, Op. 59 January 4, 1880 J. Raff Trio in A minor, Op. 155 |
December 5, 1880
Schumann: Quartet in A minor, Op. 41 December 26, 1880 Mozart: Quartet in C minor, K.465 January 16, 1881 Schubert: Quartet in D minor, post D.810 |
December 4, 1881
Grieg: Sonata in F, Op. 8 December 18, 1881 Beethoven: Quartet in C minor, Op. 59 January 8, 1882 Schubert: Quintet in C, D. 956 January 22, 1882 Chopin: Polonaise brillante Op. 3 |
December 3, 1882
Schumann: Sonata in A minor, Op. 105 December 25, 1882 Schumann: Quartet in E-flat, Op. 47 May 23, 1883 Monasterio: Sierra Morena |
22nd Concert Season | 23rd Concert Season | 24th Concert Season | 25th Concert Season | 26th Concert Season | 27th Concert Season | 28th Concert Season |
December 26, 1884
Mozart: Sonata in E minor, K. 304 Mozart: Sonata in D, K. 306 Mendelssohn, Octet in E-flat, Op. 20 January 2, 1885 Schumann: Trio in F, Op. 80 January 16, 1885 Mozart: Sonata in D, K. 448 January 23, 1885 Arriaga: First Quartet in D minor February 13, 1885 J. Raff: Andante from Sonata Op. 183 Tartini: 3rd Sonata in D minor |
January 22, 1886
Beethoven: Trio in G, Op. 9 January 29, 1886 Scarlatti: Sarabande in G minor, Minuet in G, Burlesque in G. Scarlatti: Sonata in D February 19, 1886 Schumann: Quartet in F, Op. 41 February 26, 1886 Rubinstein: Sonata in D, Op. 18 |
December 10, 1886
Schubert: Trio in B-flat D. 898 December 17, 1876 Raff: Quartet in D, Op. 192 December 31, 1876 Svendsen: Octet in A, Op. 3 January 21, 1876 Arriaga: Quartet in E-flat Schubert: Fantasie in C major, D. 760 January 28, 1876 Brahms: Quartet in G minor February 10, 1876 Chopin: Nocturne in F-Sharp Chopin: Polonaise in A-flat, Svendsen: Romance Op. 26 |
November 25, 1887
Mendelssohn: Sonata in E, Op. 6 December 2, 1887 Rubinstein: Sonata in F minor Op. 49 January 27, 1888 Chopin: Sonata in B-flat minor, Op. 35 |
November 30, 1888
Saint-Saëns: Quartet in B-flat, Op. 41 December 28, 1888 Schumann: Carnaval, Op. 9 Svendsen: Quintet in C, Op. 5 January 11, 1889 Brentón: Trio in E March 31, 1889 Godard: Sonata in D minor, Op. 104 April 2, 1889 Rubinstein: Melody Op. 3 |
October 25, 1889
Dvorak: Quintet in A, Op. 81 November 8, 1889 Brahms: Sextet in B-flat, Op. 18 Chopin: Sonata in B-flat, Op. 58 November 15, 1889 Beethoven: Quintet in C, Op. 29 November 29, 1889 Rubinstein: Trio in B-flat, Op. 52 November 7, 1890 Schubert: Quintet in A, D. 667 |
September 18, 1890
Chopin: Polonaise in E-flat Delsart: Korrigane arr. for Cello & Piano Monasterio: Adios a la Alhambra. Monasterio: Rondo Liebanense November 7, 1890 Nawratil: Quintet in C minor, Op. 17 November 28, 1890 Beethoven: Quartet in A minor, Op. 132 December 5, 1890 4th, 1880 Asioli: Sonata in C |
29th Concert Season | 30th Concert Season | 31st Concert Season | ||||
November 6, 1891
Schumann: Sonata in D minor, Op. 121 November 13, 1891 Brahms: Trio in C minor, Op. 101 November 20, 1891 Saint-Saëns: Sonata in C minor, Op. 32 November 27, 1891 Beethoven: Sonata in C minor, Op. 111 Chopin: Nocturne in F Raff: La Fileuse Mozart: Sonata in D, K.1, No. 2 and No. 1 Mozart: Rondo in A minor, K. 511 December 4, 1891 Rubinstein: Sonata in G, Op. 39, December 18, 1891 Schumman: Elevation and L'Oiseau prophète from Op.82 Schumman: Sonata in G minor Op. 22, |
November 18, 1892
Saint-Saëns: Trio in F, Op. 18 December 2, 1892 Weber: Sonata in E-flat, Op. 47 |
December 4, 1893
Godard: Quartet in A, Op. 136 December 8, 1893 Beethoven: Trio in B-flat, Op. 97 December 15, 1893 Brahms: Quintet in B minor, Op. 115 December 22, 1893 Grieg: Sonata in G minor, Op. 13 December 29, 1893 Schumann/Wieck: Sonata No. 4 in F minor January 5, 1894 Tchaikovsky: Quartet in D, Op. 11 |
The repertoire selection show a clear preference for composers of Germanic countries. The most widespread compositions were those by: Beethoven (37 different works), Mozart (25), Haydn (14), Mendelssohn (18), Schumann (13), Rubinstein (8), Schubert (only 5).[2] Schubert works appeared relatively late in their concert seasons (since 1889) and his works did not achieve great success or were regularly scheduled. The performers frequently repeated works in their programs as requested by the audience.[1]
Mozart String Quintet No. 4 in G minor, K. 516 was the most interpreted work (33 times between 1863 and 1891), followed by Beethoven's Violin Sonata No. 9, Op. 47 (29 times), and Mozart's Quartet in D minor K. 421 (23 times).
Rehearsal Hall at the Conservatory:
A small room at Madrid Conservatory served for their first performances. This room was intended for lectures at the conservatory. It was usually described as small, cold, sober, and poorly decorated. It had chairs and straw benches for the public, a small ticket box with four music stands, and a grand piano made by the Pleyel house. After the first concerts, the room became inadequate to accommodate the audience. Therefore, this room was renewed in 1879: The box disappeared, and a parquet floor is installed, which offered a broader space to the interpreters. However, these modifications were not to the liking of Monasterio, who constantly complained of excessive loudness and resonance issues.
Salón Romero:
Formerly a ballroom for meetings known as Café Teatro de Capellanes, Salon Romero Opened on April 30, 1884. It showed a luxurious decoration, capacity for 450 seated people (expandable to 700), a circular stage with capacity for 50 performers, and excellent acoustics. The capacity of the venue allowed society to reduce the price of tickets for certain sections of the audience, with the idea of attracting more public and make themselves more accessible to the lower class.
Performances Outside of Madrid:[4]
-1878: Monasterio proposed attempt to organize a concert in Paris followed by a tour of concerts in France and Belgium. it was not achieved due to financial concerns
-1882: Three concerts are offered in Lisbon in April. For this, Rafael Perez was replaced by Arbós
-1886: A single concert is offered in Lisbon.
-1889: They offered three concerts in the Municipal Conservatory of Valencia in March and April.
-1890: Tour through Valladolid, Burgos, Bilbao, Barcelona, and Zaragoza in February and March
-1890: Tour in Asturias: Oviedo, Aviles and Gijón in September.
-1890: Other four performances in Bilbao.
The ticket prices of the society were considered regular prices for his time. These were such to make them affordable for the most audience. The Spanish Peseta became the official currency after 1869, which equated approximately 4 reales.
First period (1863-1884): | Second period (1884-1894): |
---|---|
Season tickets: 60 reales
Individual tickets: 20 reales |
Season tickets (first 6 concerts): 15-25 Pesetas
Second annual season (3 concerts): Half the price. Individual tickets: 3-5 pesetas. |
They divided earnings were among the members of society. For external musicians individual contracts were made including all pianists after Guelbenzu. The society had a pedagogical and informative mission, absolutely not lucrative. For this reason it was not an initiative with significant profit.
Society of Quartets of Madrid is remembered for their excellence of chamber music performance. From their very first season, they received notable reviews and their success inspired new musical societies and chamber music enthusiasm. The Society of Quartets is one of the best examples of exceptional patrimony from Iberian countries. Mariano Soriano Fuertes, described the impact of the society in his publication Calendario Histórico—Musical in 1873 as an example of how, though Germany produced some of the greatest chamber music works, Spain can be proud to be home of great performers of such masterpieces.[1] Soriano Fuentes goes further to say that the benefits of the society can be seen in an apparent inspiration seen in the work of young composers since the year of 1864.
TRANSLATION: Germans can be proud of the works of their illustrious children Mozart, Beethoven and Haydn; However, the Spaniards can also be the distinguished interpreters of these works and that form the Society of Quartets. We have heard the instrumental music of the aforementioned classic authors, in Germany, Belgium, England and France, and although perfectly interpreted by distinguished professors, we have not heard it so perfectly felt, so masterfully accentuated and with such difficult ease felt, as in the Hall of the National School of Music. The benefits that the Society of Quartets has reported to art can be seen in the turn taken by young composers in their new works from the year 1864 to the present, and the taste that has developed among fans of this kind of music , so supporters before the cut and melodic rhythm of Italian music. The benefits of utility that have been reported by distinguished professors, creators, and supporters of such great thinking, compared to their work and efforts, are equal to zero. Things of Spain!
Los alemanes pueden estar orgullosos con las obras de sus ilustres hijos Mozart, Beethoven y Haydn; empero los españoles lo pueden estar también por los distinguidos intérpretes de dichas obras y que forman la Sociedad de Cuartetos. Hemos oído ejecutar la música instrumental de los antedichos clásicos autores, en Alemania, Bélgica, Inglaterra y Francia, y aunque perfectamente interpretada por profesores distinguidos, no la hemos oído tan perfectamente sentida, tan magistralmente acentuada y con tan dificil facilidad sentida, como en el salón de la Escuela nacional de música. Los beneficios que ha reportado al arte la Sociedad de Cuartetos, pueden verse en el giro que han tomado los jóvenes compositores en sus nuevas obras desde el ario 1864 hasta el presente, y el gusto que se ha desarrollado entre los aficionados a esta clase de música, tan partidarios antes del corte y ritmo melódico de la música italiana. Los Beneficios de la utilidad que han reportado los distinguidos profesores, creadores, y sostenedores de tan gran pensamiento, comparados con sus trabajos y desvelos, son iguales a cero. Cosas de España!
Soriano Fuertes, Mariano. Calendario histórico musical para el año de 1873. Madrid: Impr. de la Biblioteca de instruccion y recreo, Page: 58. 1872.
Analysis of the interpretation and reception of chamber music in Spain during the 19th century has identified a transformation of the sensibility and critical aesthetic especially during the decade of 1870,[1] which allowed the gradual assimilation of classic and romantic chamber music works. Thus, Spanish concert life began to equate that of rest of Europe. As described by José Castro y Serrano, Spain was admirably predisposed to the appreciation and assimilation of all fine arts. It was the special circumstances of a political and economic hardship that stopped fifty years of progress in the country's scientific, literary and artistic development.[5] In this evolution, the Society of Quartets played a crucial pedagogical role. From the small recital hall in the conservatory and later at the Salon Romero, the members of the Society served as professors who taught with their performances the music of the great masters of chamber music. Their concerts also included the severe and delicate character of Spanish music. Their cultivation of chamber music was enjoyed by the proletarian and working classes.
Among his most outstanding students were cellist Pablo Casals and violinist Enrique Fernández Arbós. Casals lived in Madrid for two years where he studied counterpoint with Tomas Breton; and chamber music with Jesus de Monasterio. A that point, Monasterio was also the Director of the Madrid Conservatory. Breton was a leading Spain's composer, and had written the first genuinely Spanish opera. In his memoirs, Casals said Monasterio was an excellent teacher that emphasized intonation and proper accentuation in chamber music performance. Casals grew musically under the influence of both these fine musicians.
In the first stage (1863-1884): More influx than allowed by the small conservatory room. On many occasions, a good part of the public remained standing. In the second stage (1884-1894): It does not get to fill the stalls of the Romero Hall. The concerts had a small but understandable audience, a minority compared to that of the opera and the zarzuela. The society received favorable reviews and had a progressively wider presence in local and national newspapers. According to the criticisms published, the high interpretative quality of all musicians, especially the violinist Jesús de Monasterio, can be confirmed. The violinist's interpretive style would be seen, from the current point of view, not entirely respectful of the historical criteria of interpretation or the wishes of the oldest authors. As described in texts by his Quartet colleagues, Monasterio often took artistic licenses, especially as regards the choice of tempos and the character and dynamics of certain musical phrases. On the other hand, he was very rigorous with the tuning and rhythmic coordination of the Quartet. It would not come, until the 1880s, a stream of musicians who sought a more faithful and less artificial interpretation of the classical authors. The new current was represented by Arbós (upon his return from Germany) who made more than one criticism of his teacher
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