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HAYDN'S FORGOTTEN QUARTETS: THREE OF THE ‘PARIS’ SYMPHONIES ARRANGED FOR STRING QUARTET
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 July 2011
Abstract
In 1787 Artaria, Haydn's publisher in Vienna, issued three versions of The Seven Last Words: the original orchestral version, a quartet arrangement prepared by the composer and a keyboard arrangement sanctioned by him. A year later, in September 1788, Artaria issued three of the recent ‘Paris’ Symphonies, Nos 84, 85 and 86, in an arrangement for quartet. While the quartet version of The Seven Last Words has always been accepted as part of the canon, the three quartet arrangements of the symphonies have been ignored. Sympathetic consideration of a range of evidence, including the bibliographical, historical and text-critical, suggests that Haydn may have been the author of these three quartets.
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References
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20 Seven manuscript sources for one or more of the arrangements survive: A GÖ, A Wgm, CZ K, CZ Pnm, CZ Pk, I Gl. None of these derives from Haydn. See JHW, series 1, volume 12: Pariser Sinfonien 1. Folge, Kritischer Bericht, ed. Hiroschi Nakano (Munich: Henle, 1979), 13; and JHW, 1/13, 182.
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25 Landon, Correspondence, 39; Bartha, Briefe, 120.
26 Landon, Correspondence, 41, 51–52, 87; Bartha, Briefe, 127, 148–149, 209.
27 Landon, Correspondence, 70–71; Bartha, Briefe, 179–180.
28 Landon, Correspondence, 61–62; Bartha, Briefe, 164–165.
29 Weinmann, Verlagsverzeichnis, 19, 23.
30 For full bibliographical details see Hoboken, Werkverzeichnis, volume 3, 43–44. The increasing sense of discrimination associated with the genre at the turn of the century, together with the emerging primacy of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, is a historical narrative that has yet to be fully articulated. As well as the published output of Artaria, the narrative would feature the popularity of the genre in socially exclusive aristocratic and bourgeois circles, the common practice of patrons owning a set of quartets for a period of time before the composer was allowed to distribute it to a buying public, and the repertoire of the private subscription concerts organized by Ignaz Schuppanzigh and Nicolaus Kraft. For a summary of the printed repertoire up to 1800 (but omitting all arrangements, including The Seven Last Words) and of the social culture that supported the genre see Walter, Horst, ‘Zum Wiener Streichquartett der Jahre 1780 bis 1800’, Haydn-Studien 7/3–4 (1998), 289–314Google Scholar .
31 This remark was first reported by Pohl, who claimed that it had been passed from father to son in the Artaria family; Pohl, Joseph Haydn, volume 1, 332. The two family members were probably Domenico Artaria (1775–1842) and August Artaria (1807–1893). The notion that Haydn's output of string quartets began with Op. 9 may have been current in the 1790s. The list of the composer's quartets in Traeg's catalogue of 1799 likewise begins with Op. 9; Weinmann, Johann Traeg, 63.
32 The plates of the orchestral version carry the number 114; when these were taken over unaltered, 113 was added alongside 114, indicating that they could be used to print the orchestral and the quartet versions; new plates were given the number 113, indicating that they were to be used for the quartet version only. Exemplar of Artaria print studied: GB Lbl.
33 See letter of 12 July 1787; Landon, Correspondence, 66; Bartha, Briefe, 172.
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35 It is not known whether Eybler obliged. Letter of 27 March 1789; Landon, Correspondence, 81–82; Bartha, Briefe, 201.
36 Letter to Georg August Griesinger, 1 October 1801; Landon, Correspondence, 191; Bartha, Briefe, 380.
37 No. 84: CH Bps; a facsimile is to be found in the Hoboken Photogramm Archiv in A Wn. Only the slow introduction of No. 85 survives: D Bsb; No. 86: F Pn.
38 This alternation is not included in the list of corrections to the autograph score given in JHW, 1/13/2, 175.
39 These changes to the autograph score of the symphony are noted in JHW, 1/13/2, 175.
40 JHW does not document variant readings in the Artaria parts of the symphony. Exemplar of Artaria print studied: A Wst.
41 Somfai, László, ‘An Introduction to the Study of Haydn's String Quartet Autographs’, in The String Quartets of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven: Studies of the Autograph Manuscripts, ed. Wolff, Christoph (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1980), 5–51Google Scholar . Schafer, Hollace Ann, ‘“A wisely ordered Phantasie”: Joseph Haydn's Creative Process from the Sketches and Drafts for Instrumental Music' (PhD dissertation, Brandeis University, 1987)Google Scholar .
42 My translation. ‘Aus mangl der Zeit hab ich das 5te noch nicht setzen können, unterdessen aber ist dasselbe schon componiert.’ Bartha, Briefe, 172.
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