* En anglais uniquement
The
Busch Quartet was one of the most outstanding string quartets in the first half of the twentieth century. The early version of this group was founded in 1912 as the Vienna Konzertvereinsquartett, with
Adolf Busch as leader and first violinist, but the outbreak of war in 1914 ended this group. Even before demobilization was declared in November 1918,
Busch founded a second quartet under his own name, holding over cellist Paul Grümmer from the earlier group. In 1921 violist Paul Doktor, also an original member, likewise rejoined, and Swede Gösta Andreasson, one of
Busch's students, accepted the second chair. This became the
Busch Quartet of the 1920s, and there would be only one more overall change in the group when Grümmer retired in 1930 -- he was replaced by
Adolf Busch's younger brother Hermann Busch. The "fifth Beatle" of the
Busch Quartet was pianist
Rudolf Serkin, who joined them in quintet literature such as
Schubert's Trout.
The quartet's recording career began in 1931, but Hitler's rise to power in 1933 led the members to scatter. At first,
Busch resettled in Basel in neutral Switzerland, and the group resumed its activities, including making some more recordings in London. Ultimately,
Busch relocated to the United States when the Second World War appeared imminent, and the
Busch Quartet made its final recordings for Columbia Records in New York. The
Busch Quartet finally called it quits in 1945 when Doktor's health began to fail.
The
Busch Quartet recorded all of the
Beethoven quartets and all of best-known chamber music of
Schubert,
Schumann, and
Brahms -- this was before the development of the LP record. When
Serkin joined them and additional parts were filled out by friends and other musicians, the group became the
Busch Chamber Players, and in this configuration recorded the first complete set of
J.S. Bach's Brandenburg Concertos in London in 1935.