String Quartet No. 3 in A Major

Op. 41/3

Schumann’s three string quartets were the first fruits of his concentrated study of the quartets of Haydn and Mozart in spring 1842. These quartets were composed in a state of white heat during June and July and dedicated to Felix Mendelssohn upon their first performance at the Leipzig Gewandhaus the following January; they launched a remarkable period of chamber-music composition—the Piano Quintet, the Piano Quartet and a set of four Phantasiestücke for piano trio were all finished before the end of the year. A brief slow introduction opens the String Quartet No. 3 with a droopy falling motif that will permeate the opening movement. The traditional scherzo is replaced by a set of four variations on an oblique, agitated theme and is followed by a slow movement of agonised intensity. The obsessive dotted rhythm that provides a heartbeat to much of this “Adagio” is carried over into the altogether more outdoorsy rondo “Finale”, which whirls the work—and Schumann’s entire output for string quartet—to an exuberant close.

Related Works

Select a country or region

Africa, Middle East, and India

Asia Pacific

Europe

Latin America and the Caribbean

The United States and Canada