By Erik Levi

Published: Wednesday, 10 August 2022 at 12:00 am


Few chamber music works convey emotional turbulence with such graphic intensity as Alexander Zemlinsky’s String Quartet No. 2.

Written between 1913 and 1915, this epic one-movement composition lays bare all the bitter disappointments he experienced on a personal and professional level after 1900. A doomed love affair with his composition pupil Alma Schindler, who left him to marry Gustav Mahler, had a particularly traumatic impact. But no less damaging was the decline in his fortunes as a composer.

Following the award of the prestigious Beethoven Prize in 1897 and the considerable success enjoyed by his fairy-tale opera Es war einmal, premiered at the Vienna Opera in 1900, Zemlinsky was fully expecting to make further waves in Viennese musical life. But his luck seems to have run out. The cancelled first performance of his next stage work, Der Traumgörge (‘Görge the Dreamer’), was a cruel blow, not least because its removal came about not for artistic reasons but because Felix Weingartner, Mahler’s successor as director of the Vienna Opera, refused to programme the work, even though it had already been placed into production.

Three years later, the lukewarm reception accorded to his fourth opera, Kleider machen Leute (‘Clothes make the man’), effectively convinced Zemlinsky to leave the Austrian capital and relocate to Prague, where he became conductor at the German Opera House.

During this period, Zemlinsky’s musical style moved far beyond the Brahmsian ambience of his early years. Of particular significance was the close relationship he formed with Arnold Schoenberg, further cemented when the younger man married Zemlinsky’s sister, Mathilde. For many years, Zemlinsky was Schoenberg’s mentor in musical matters, both composers pursuing an increasingly advanced musical idiom in response to the growing allure of Wagnerian chromaticism, features that are particularly evident in the Second Quartet’s emotionally frenzied and dissonant expressionist writing. Nonetheless, Zemlinsky resisted the temptation to follow his younger contemporary down the path of atonality, and the strong rapport between the two men came under severe strain with the scandal that surrounded the suicide of the painter Richard Gerstl, who was having an affair with Schoenberg’s wife.

The harrowing autobiographical circumstances of Zemlinsky’s long-standing infatuation for Alma Mahler, Gerstl’s suicide and his increasingly troubled relationship with Schoenberg are encapsulated in the Second Quartet through the use of musical ciphers which serve to bind the work into a convincing entity. These include the composer’s own musical cipher D-E-G, heard at the very opening, a quotation from Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht, and a four-note motif (A-B-D-E) associated with Mathilde.

A guide to Zemlinsky’s  String Quartet No. 2