A composition for five string instruments. The early history of the quintet for two violins, two violas and cello is similar to that of the string quartet, though the repertory is smaller. Outstanding are the mature quintets of Mozart, which realize fully the textural richness and variety of which the medium is capable. Beethoven and Mendelssohn both wrote attractive string quintets; in the later 19th century Brahms wrote two, on a high level, and Bruckner one. Martinů and Milhaud are among the few 20th-century composers to have used the medium.
The quintet for two violins, one viola and two cellos has also been extensively cultivated. Its chief exponent in the 18th century was Boccherini, who composed over 100, and the repertory includes one towering masterpiece, Schubert's Quintet in C d 956. Of the few works in which a double bass replaces the second cello, the best-known is Dvořák's op.77.




