Beethoven, String Quartet No.14 in C sharp minor, op.123

The introverted and personal quality of Beethoven's late style is evident in this string quartet, written the year before the composer's death. At this stage in Beethoven's life, he was composing more for himself than for an audience, for he no longer felt it necessary to prove himself to his public. Despite the popular belief that Beethoven (at that time) was indifferent to the sound of his music because of his deafness, his sketchbooks show that he rewrote the last four bars of the variations of the quartet 12 times. It is the music of a man who has experienced life. The composer thought that this was his greatest string quartet. A traditional string quartet consists of two violins, one viola and one cello, and is usually in four movements; the String Quartet in C sharp minor contains seven movements, played without a pause. Leonard Bernstein said: "The C sharp minor Quartet seems to cry out for the whole string section." In this performance, the work is played by an orchestra of 60 strings. This recording is part of Leonard Bernstein's Beethoven cycle, recorded primarily with the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra in the early 1980s. Writing in The New York Times, critic John J. O'Connor stated: "As Mr. Bernstein says, there is 'no single body of work in the universe of orchestral music that is in any way comparable to this one.' Conducted with intense dedication and soaring spirits by Mr. Bernstein, these recordings are superb, both visually and aurally."

  • No: A05500627
  • Genre: Concert
  • Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Conductor: Leonard Bernstein
  • Orchestra: Wiener Philharmoniker
  • Director: Humphrey Burton
  • Music Genre: Orchestral Music
  • Production year: 1977
  • Run time: 00:59:00
  • Format: 4:3