String Quartet | |
Subtitle: | No. 16 |
Type: | Late string quartet |
Key: | F major |
Opus: | 135 |
Composed: | October 1826 |
Dedication: | Johann Nepomuk Wolfmayer |
Movements: | Four |
Premiere Date: | 23 March 1828 |
Premiere Performers: | Schuppanzigh Quartet |
The String Quartet No. 16 in F major, Op. 135, by Ludwig van Beethoven was written in October 1826[1] and was the last major work he completed. Only the final movement of the Quartet Op. 130, written as a replacement for the Große Fuge, was composed later. Beethoven dedicated the composition to his patron and admirer, Johann Nepomuk Wolfmayer. The Schuppanzigh Quartet premiered the work on 23 March 1828, one year after Beethoven's death.
The Op. 135 quartet is the shortest of Beethoven's late quartets. Under the introductory slow chords in the last movement, which is headed German: Der schwer gefaßte Entschluß (The difficult decision), Beethoven wrote in the manuscript German: Muß es sein? (Must it be?) to which he responds, with the faster main theme of the movement, German: Es muß sein! (It must be!).
It is in four movements:
The autograph manuscript of the first movement pf the work is preserved in the Beethoven House.
The performance of the work takes around 22–25 minutes.
The work features in Czech author Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being, where the character Tomas uses the phrases German: Muß es sein? and German: Es muß sein! to describe his approach to fate.[2]