Langsamer Satz
Langsamer Satz is a composition for string quartet in one movement by Anton Webern, written in 1905.
History
Webern was from 1904 a pupil of Arnold Schoenberg in Vienna. He composed Langsamer Satz for string quartet in June 1905, three years before his first work with an opus number, the Passacaglia for orchestra. The same year, he finished his first year as Schoenberg's pupil and also completed his dissertation in musicology about Heinrich Isaac.In the spring of 1905, Webern had hiked with his cousin Wilhelmine Mortl, and future wife, outside Vienna, and fallen in love with her. The music is believed to have been inspired by his feelings for her. Webern had planned to compose a full string quartet but completed only this movement.
The work was lost but rediscovered in the early 1960s when Hans and Rosaleen Moldenhauer found manuscripts in an attic in Perchtoldsdorf. It was published by Carl Fischer.
Music
The music of Langsamer Satz is marked Langsam, mit bewegtem Ausdruck. The piece, in C minor, is still composed in the tradition of Johannes Brahms, especially in matters of sonority and rhetoric, while special effects such as tremolo sul ponticello are new, and a precursor of the String Quartet, Op. 5, written in 1909.The style compares to Schoenberg's late-Romantic Verklärte Nacht. Described as "a love song to the woman he would later marry", the music is very expressive, portraying yearning, "dramatic turmoil" and peaceful tranquility. The duration is given as eight minutes.