Vienna was in the grip of serious political unrest that forced many Jewish artists into exile when Erich Wolfgang Korngold composed his Second String Quartet in 1933, first performed the following year in the Austrian capital. In it he celebrated, before it faded away, the vitality of a musical school of which Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had been one of the founders more than a century and a half earlier, and which Anton Webern had helped to usher into modernity. It is this lineage that the musicians of the Quatuor Hermès highlight works that bear witness to a fascinating narrative power and could be understood as an expression of a farewell. In addition to Korngold’s Quartet No. 2, the program includes Mozart’s String Quartet No 15 and Webern’s Langsamer Satz.








