I heard a remarkable new piece of chamber music this past January. The work, the String Quartet no. 4 (1988) by the thirty-seven-year-old composer George Tsontakis, was performed in its world premiere by the American String Quartet at New York’s 92nd Street YM-YWHA. By its excellence it not only buoyed my often drooping musical spirits; it also prompted in me some thoughts on the general subject of American quartet music, both old and new.
The composers of American classical music may be pardoned for wondering whether a facetious deity has placed them in an environment rewarding in every way save the most important: that of feeling—somewhere, somehow—that what they have composed has been listened to and not just heard, and that there is at least a chance of their work living on in the collective memory.
Americans have long been a musical people. Occasions spiritual and secular, individual and social, private and public, have always been accompanied by music-making and music-listening. Classical music, that infinitely noble but always quixotic genre, has ever been a preoccupation of our middle and upper classes, and even of significant sections of our “masses.” An American classical music, not just simply an American classical music, has been a goal of our most gifted musicians since at least the middle of the nineteenth century.
Americans have long been a musical people.
Today, as the twentieth century nears its end, America is full of music. But the sound that so permeates our