C
H A M B E R M U S I C |
| STRING QUARTET IN D MINOR |
| |
'Entbehren
sollst du, sollst entbehren' [Thou shalt renounce, shalt renounce] (1879-1884)
Edited von Hans Jancik (1960) |
| W 15/1-STP | Study
score ISMN 979-0-50025-055-5 |
| W 15/1-STI | Instrumental
parts ISMN 979-0-50025-057-9 |
| Wolf's string
quartet, begun when he was nineteen, clearly shows the influence of Beethoven – particularly
the Beethoven of the later string quartets and sonatas – but also makes
it clear that Wolf by now had an astounding mastery both of form (already
transformed in his own particular way) and of expressive means. (Hans
Jancik) |
|
| INTERMEZZO IN E FLAT
MAJOR FOR STRING QUARTET (1886) |
| | Edited
by Hans Jancik (1960) |
| W 15/2-STP |
Study score
ISMN 979-0-50025-056-2 |
| W 15/2-STI | Instrumental
parts ISMN 979-0-50025-058-6 |
| The Intermezzo was Wolf's second completed
work of chamber music; published here for the first time, it was composed
in 1886, between the String Quartet in D minor and the Serenade for string
quartet. |
|
| SERENADE
FOR STRING QUARTET (1887) |  |
| | Edited
by Hans Jancik (1960)
Revised by Leopold Spitzer (1999) |
| W
15/3-STP | Study score, with critical
report
ISMN 979-0-50025-206-1 | | W
15/3-STI | Instrumental parts ISMN 979-0-50025-060-9 |
The Serenade is among the best-known
and most often-played of all Wolf's works. It contains an eternally fascinating
abundance of charming musical ideas, and the listening ear cannot but admire
the composer's subtle feeling for sound colours. (Hans Jancik)
For Wolf's own 1892 instrumentation of this piece for small orchestra, the
Italian Serenade, see W XVII/2. |
|
| CONCERTO FOR PIANO AND VIOLIN op. 6 (1875) |
| | Edited,
with a critical report, by Leopold Spitzer (1994) |
| W 15/4 | ISMN 979-0-50025-061-6 | | This work was composed
in the autumn of 1875, when Wolf was beginning his studies at the Konservatorium
der Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde. The first and second movements are complete,
the third movement breaks off after 25 bars. |
|