The Prussian Quartets are a set of three string quartets, nos. 21–23 (K. 575, 589, 590), nicknamed 'Prussian', composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart between 1789-90 and dedicated to the King of Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm II. Although not considered on a par with the earlier, more famous 'Haydn Quartets' (K. 387, 421, 428, 458, 464, 465), these pieces are noted for their beauty, equilibrium amongst the instruments and the exceptional prominence and cantabile nature of the cello part (the instrument played by the king himself). These are also the only pieces in this genre that Mozart composed 'to order', i.e. as a commission from a royal patron.
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Due to the prominence of the cello part these quartets came to be known as 'Concertante Quartets'.
While Mozart was composing these quartets he was also working on a set of sonatas for the King's daughter, Princess Friederike (K. 576 was the only one completed). He was paid 100 Friedrichsd’or for his work. But thereafter Mozart received no more of his promised fees. In effect Mozart withheld the dedication and engraved the piece at his own expense as he wrote in a letter to his friend and fellow freemason Michael von Puchberg: "…I am meanwhile composing…six quartets for the King, all of which Kozeluch is going to engrave at my expense."[1]
Mozart never dedicated the pieces to the Prussian King, so the title of these quartets has originated from his private 'thematic catalogue' of his own work (which he was keeping at the time). He entered them as A quartet for 2 violins, viola, and cello, for his Majesty the King of Prussia.
Initially the quartets were enthusiastically received. For instance the Wiener Zeitung announced the publication of the quartets as follows:
Haydn had been very impressed by these quartets, so much so that he is known to have said:
But these quartets have sunk since their heyday. Although they are regularly performed and well loved by audiences they are not considered as pivotal as his earlier Haydn Quartets.