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Friedrich Ernst Fesca

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String Quartet No.9 in E flat Major, Op.3 No.3--New Edition

Friedrich Ernst Fesca (1789-1826) was born in the German town of Magdeburg. He studied piano and violin with several different teachers, including for a short time Ludwig Spohr. By age 16 had already obtained a position as a violinist in the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. Not long after, he was employed as solo violinist to the Court of Jerome Bonaparte, at that time, King of Westphalia. After this he lived for a while in Vienna where he befriended the famous violinist, Ignaz Schuppanzigh, first violinist of the famous Beethoven Razumovsky String Quartet. His final years were spent working in Karlsruhe along with fellow composer Franz Danzi. He composed in nearly every genre from opera to solo piano works, however, the bulk of his out put was chamber music. Carl Maria von Weber, writing of Fesca’s chamber music, had this to say. “Mr. Fesca is completely master of whatever he undertakes to express. I am fully convinced of his remarkable talent. His works are carefully written, thoroughly elaborated and richly flavored." Fesca was widely hailed as a worthy successor to Haydn and Mozart and his quartets were frequently performed on a regular basis up until the middle of the 19th century when they began to disappear.

 

String Quartet No.9 is the second of a set dating from 1817. The opening movement, Allegro, begins in an unusual fashion with a partial downward scale played at an andante rather than allegro tempo, and allegretto probably would have been a more fitting tempo marking for this pleasant movement. The a very beautiful song without works, Adagio, comes next. The third movement, Scherzo, presto, clearly shows the influence and forward drive of Beethoven's early quartets. The finale, Allegro molto, begins with a lively fugue in which Fesca shows off his compositional talent.

 

Parts: $24.95

 

Parts & Score: $34.95

              

 

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