Skip to content
BSO, Pops, Tanglewood, and Symphony Hall Logos

Between Two Worlds | Beethoven & Romanticism

Boston Symphony Orchestra

The BYSO Youth Center for Music

Lydian String Quartet 
Scott Burnham, speaker 

BEETHOVEN String Quartet No. 16 in F, Op. 135 

Beethoven’s last five string quartets hold a special place in Western music history. Though Beethoven is quite fittingly imagined to be the composer who bridged the Classical and Romantic periods, these works seem to operate from some different cultural geography altogether. Timeless, enigmatic, existential, deadly serious and bluntly humorous, full of extreme contrasts, the late quartets are quite unlike anything that came before or after. This group of works is often held up as the quintessential expression of artistic “lateness,” of that which happens to artistic expression toward the end of an artist’s life. Beethoven scholar Scott Burnham discusses the special qualities of Beethoven’s late style as demonstrated through a performance by the acclaimed Boston-based Lydian String Quartet of his final string quartet, Op. 135.

Performance Details

Jan 22, 2025, 6:00pm EST