Budapest Quartet (1886)

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The Budapest Quartet was a string quartet established in Budapest, Hungary in 1886 by Jenő Hubay and David Popper.

Johannes Brahms performed with the quartet and thought it was the best he had heard.[1]

This quartet went under a variety of names. Outside Hungary, it was usually called "Quartet Hubay-Popper". Within Hungary it was called "Hungarian Quartet" or "Budapest Quartet". This was because Hungarians were fiercely patriotic.[2]

They performed for twenty-seven years.[3]

Composition

The quartet's initial composition was:

Herzfeld played in the years 1886-1889 and 1897-1899. There are also Wilhelm Grünfeld (concertmaster of Budapest Opera) who played in 1888 the 2nd violin and 1889 [[{{{1}}}]][] (later a teacher at the Music Academy). After there two students of Hubay played the 2nd violin: in 1894 János Farkas and from 1895 Rudolf Kemény.[4] Elderling left the quartet soon. Violist from 1888 was Josef Waldbauer[5][6][7] and from 1898 Gustav Szerémi.

Notes

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References

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  1. Potter, The Cambridge Companion to the String Quartet, p.56
  2. Brandt, Nat (1993), Con Brio: Four Russians Called the Budapest String Quartet, p.33. Oxford University Press
  3. Avins, Performing Brahms: Early Evidence of Performance Style, p.29
  4. Dr. Bela Diosy: Ungarischer Künstler Almanach: das Kunstleben Ungarns in Wort und Bild. Musik, Königlich Ungarische Universitätsdruckerei, Budapest 1929, p. 46
  5. Tibor Frank: Berlin junction: patterns of Hungarian intellectual migrations, 1919-1933 - Hungary and the German Cultural Tradition
  6. Dr. Bela Diosy: Ungarischer Künstler Almanach: das Kunstleben Ungarns in Wort und Bild. Musik, Königlich Ungarische Universitätsdruckerei, Budapest 1929, p. 46
  7. Prof. Gianluca La Villa: Hubay e la Scuola ungherese del violino