Monday, March 09, 2009

Program notes for March 14 and 15 RCO concerts

Igor Stravinsky

b. June 17, 1882, Orianenbaum, Russia
d. April 6, 1971, New York, New York


Igor Stravinsky was one of the most important and influential composers of the twentieth century. A stylistic chameleon, Stravinsky made important innovations in areas of music from form and rhythm to tone color and harmony. Early studies with Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov had an important influence on Stravinsky’s first mature works. Those compositions got the attention of impresario Sergei Diaghilev, who commissioned Stravinsky to compose his still-popular trio of ballets, The Firebird (1910), Petrushka (1911), and The Rite of Spring (1911-1913) – the riot that broke out at the latter’s premiere remains one of the famous events in music history. Stravinsky subsequently embraced jazz idioms, found inspiration in Russian folklore, was one of the leaders in the return to past musical traditions known as neoclassicism, and even, late in his career, turned to twelve-tone composition. He toured frequently, and made many important recordings of his works. Among his collaborators were some of the most important artists of his time, including Pablo Picasso, Jean Cocteau, and W.H. Auden. A longtime exile from his native Russia, Stravinsky lived in Switzerland and France before emigrating to the United States in 1939; he lived in the Los Angeles area until his death at age 88.

Concerto in D major for String Orchestra
Composed: 1946
Duration: 12 minutes


Stravinsky’s Concerto in D major was commissioned for the twentieth anniversary of the Basel Chamber Orchestra by its founder Paul Sacher, a legendary conductor and patron of new music who also commissioned works from the likes of Richard Strauss, Bohuslav Martinu, and Béla Bartók. The first commission Stravinsky received from Europe after moving to the United States, the Concerto was begun in early 1946 and completed in August of that year. Sacher and his orchestra – to whom the Concerto is dedicated, hence its nickname "Basler" or "Basel" Concerto – gave the work its first performance on January 27, 1947 in Basel. Since then it has been choreographed on many occasions, perhaps most notably as The Cage (created by Jerome Robbins in 1951).

"Let me know how long you want the piece to be," Stravinsky replied to Sacher’s original request, saying that he could accept the commission "if it is from ten to twelve minutes, like Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos." The comparison is in some respects an apt one: the Concerto in D major is in the traditional three movements, the rhythms are lively, and throughout one can hear the contrast between solo instruments and the larger string body (the tutti) characteristic of concertos of Bach’s time. One of only two extended pieces for string orchestra by Stravinsky (the other being the 1927 ballet Apollon Musagète), the Concerto in D major was also one of the composer’s last tonal works before he turned to twelve-tone composition in the early 1950s.

An important characteristic of the Concerto is its constant movement between D major and D minor. This contrast is made clear even from the beginning of the opening Vivace, where within moments the violas and basses play an F natural (creating a D minor chord) as the violins play an F-sharp (making a D major chord). This rhythmically intricate movement is in something like sonata form, with the faster outer sections framing a central, slower Moderato that proceeds by fits and starts. By contrast, the second movement Arioso is all lyricism, as the violins spin out a long and graceful melody. The exciting closing Rondo is propelled by the energetic, scurrying figure that opens the movement.

Giovanni Bottesini

b. December 22, 1821, Crema, Italy
d. July 7, 1889, Parma, Italy


Giovanni Bottesini was one of the greatest double bass players in history. His first instruments were the timpani and violin, but he switched to the bass to earn a scholarship at the Milan Conservatory. Using a small, three-stringed Testore bass – which, according to legend, he rescued from the trash at a marionette theater – he played in orchestras in Venice and Havana, Cuba before turning to solo performance. Years of very successful tours throughout Europe, the United States, and Latin America, including performances before Queen Victoria, Czar Alexander of Russia, and Emperor Napoleon III of France, cemented his reputation as the "Paganini of the double bass." Bottesini also conducted regularly – he led the 1871 Cairo premiere of his friend Giuseppe Verdi’s opera Aida, and later served as Music Director at London’s Covent Garden and the Italian Opera in Paris. He composed throughout his life, and while he wrote about a dozen operas and considerable chamber music, it is largely his virtuoso double bass works that are remembered today.

Double Bass Concerto No. 2 in B minor
Composed: 1845
Duration: 17 minutes


There are many accounts of the effect Bottesini’s bass playing had on his audiences. "Under his bow," wrote Giovanni Depanis, "the double bass groaned, sighed, cooed, sang, quivered, roared – an orchestra in itself with irresistible force and the sweetest expression." In The Land of Melodrama, author and composer Bruno Barilli evokes the scene at a Bottesini concert: "Applause and calls for encores exploded down the disorderly rows at every bar. The magnificent ladies, finely clad, in the theatre boxes of the aristocracy were caught up in the applause without warning, trying to retain their modesty, laughing behind their fans. Supported by his great wooden sound-box, Bottesini leant over his instrument like a conquering hero."

One of the main influences on Bottesini’s composing style is the lyricism of Italian opera – supplemented, of course, in his works for double bass by the arsenal of virtuoso techniques he employed. He exploits the entire range of the instrument, employing harmonics (high-pitched notes produced by touching, rather than pressing down, the string at certain points), as well as occasional double stops, and plenty of fast-paced passagework.

Some additional pyrotechnics were added to the Concerto No. 2 in B minor by Edgar Meyer in his edition of the work – which he calls, in the liner notes for his Sony Classical recording, "my favorite piece in the bass concerto repertoire." Among the most obvious changes are the replacements of Bottesini’s cadenzas in the first and third movements by Meyer’s own, which are showstoppers in their own right.

The nimble first movement features some fast playing from the soloist – particularly in Meyer’s cadenza – but by and large the lyrical impulse wins out over the virtuosic. The second movement, with its almost operatic solo line and spare accompaniment, is followed by a propulsive Allegro finale that, rhythmically, is reminiscent of dance forms like the polonaise of Poland and the Cuban bolero, both of which Bottesini was familiar with through his travels.

Edgar Meyer

b. November 24, 1960, Oak Ridge, Tennessee.

(Photo by Jimmy Ienner Jr.)

Follow this link to Edgar Meyer's website to read his biography and find out more about his recordings and concerts.

Double Bass Concerto No. 1 in D major
Composed: 1993
Duration: 17 minutes


Edgar Meyer’s Double Bass Concerto No. 1 is the first of two solo concertos he has written so far for his instrument; he has also written concertos in which the bass is joined as soloist by cello, violin, and banjo and tabla. Written at the behest of Peter Lloyd, the Minnesota Orchestra’s principal bass player, the Concerto No. 1 was premiered on March 31, 1993, with Meyer, conductor Edo de Waart, and the Minnesota Orchestra.

Edgar Meyer’s biography testifies to his versatility, outlining in brief the variety of styles and genres in which he has performed. While a number of those styles – bluegrass and jazz among others – are hinted at in the Double Bass Concerto No. 1, the setting is otherwise quite a traditional classical one. The solo bass is backed here by a typical chamber orchestra: strings along with pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons, and horns.

The first movement opens with the insouciant entry of the bass. Emerging seemingly from the depths, with strings punctuating the ongoing bass line, the accompaniment gradually gains power as descending woodwind figures flutter above. The bluesy solo part turns even more elaborate as the orchestral texture, initially just flecks of color, begins to fill. The music builds to a climax, then returns to the opening mood.

Pizzicato strings – inspired, says Meyer, by their similar use in Franz Josef Haydn’s Violin Concerto No. 1 – accompany the long notes of the bass as the second movement begins. The music remains quiet, even tentative, as the bass line unfurls. The clarinet adds its voice. Suddenly the music bursts forth, faster and bolder – but just as quickly returns to where it was, the bass line now a bit more elaborate. As before, the winds, this time led by the oboe, lend their color.

Folksy double stops mark the main theme, what Meyer has called "a fiddle tune with blues overtones," of the third movement – music inspired by the playing of Sam Bush, a violin and mandolin player and frequent Meyer collaborator. The bass part gradually becomes a moto perpetuo, calming only briefly for a more spacious interlude accompanied by spare string chords. But then the orchestra takes over the theme as the bass churns away underneath, leading to the swirling virtuoso line of the soloist in the Concerto’s exciting conclusion.

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

b. January 27, 1756, Salzburg, Austria
d. December 5, 1791, Vienna, Austria

No reminder is really needed of the unique stature of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in the history of Western music. His vast catalog of compositions – over 600 of them, including some 15 operas, 17 masses, 50 symphonies, 20 piano concertos, 23 string quartets, and so on (the list can go on for quite some time) – epitomizes the German-Austrian Classical style. His music is recognized and loved all over the world for its melodic, harmonic, and textural richness and beauty. The son of a well-known violinist and pedagogue, Mozart was one of the greatest prodigies ever, playing his first public concert at age five and composing his first music at seven. Before reaching the age of ten he had already played recitals in front of the likes of Marie Antoinette and King George III of England. He traveled throughout Europe through his teens. After failing to find a secure post elsewhere, and having grown dissatisfied with his career in Salzburg, Mozart moved to Vienna, where he spent the last decade of his life. While he enjoyed some successes with his new operas and piano concertos, life there grew more and more precarious, leading to his early death at age thirty-five.

Symphony No. 38 in D major, K. 504 "Prague"
Composed: 1786
Duration: 30 minutes


As mentioned above, Mozart did enjoy some considerable triumphs during his Vienna years. But as time went on, he increasingly had to compete with other musicians and institutions for concert and commission opportunities. The premiere at Vienna’s Burgtheater of the opera Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro) on May 1, 1786 didn’t help matters – critics and fellow musicians were enthusiastic, but audiences didn’t embrace the new work, and only seven further performances ensued. However, a few months later, Figaro was performed at the National Theater (now the Theater of the Estates or Tyl Theater) in Prague and received an overwhelming response, so much so that Mozart, spurred on by his friends and by an invitation from music patron Count Johann Joseph Thun, decided to visit Prague for himself. He and his wife Constanze arrived on January 11, 1787.

What they found was something like Mozart- and Figaro-mania: Mozart wrote to his friend Gottfried von Jacquin that "people here talk about nothing but Figaro. Nothing is played, sung, or whistled but Figaro. Nothing, nothing but Figaro. Certainly a great honor for me!" Within a few days of his arrival Mozart presented a concert featuring his Piano Concerto No. 25. Then, at a Grand Musical Academy performance on January 19, he conducted the premiere of his Symphony No. 38, now nicknamed the "Prague." The symphony – his first since No. 36, the "Linz," of three years before – had been completed back in December in Vienna, and Mozart brought the score with him to Prague. Contrary to some accounts, the work was not written specifically for that city, as it had been completed before Mozart was invited to visit. In any event, those Prague concerts, which also included Mozart-led performances of Figaro, were thoroughgoing successes and led to an important commission for an opera – Don Giovanni, which was premiered in Prague in October 1787.

The Symphony No. 38 is unusual in that it only features three movements – it is possibly the only major symphony of the time that dispenses with the minuet that had become a standard part of the form. Perhaps Mozart felt that the three movements of the "Prague" Symphony were substantial and dramatic enough on their own.

In common with only two other Mozart symphonies (the aforementioned "Linz" and No. 39), the first movement opens with a slow introduction. It explores a range of moods and textures, including some poignant dissonances and a dramatic turn into the minor key with trumpets and timpani blazing. The Allegro main body of the movement begins almost unobtrusively, with a quiet rising sequence and syncopations over a single repeated note in the violins, leading into another trumpet and drum outburst, this time a festive one. This and the lyrical second theme are only two of the six motives that Mozart introduces. Although it sounds effortless, the counterpoint of the development section – called by Alfred Einstein "one of the greatest, most serious, most aggressive in all Mozart’s works" – was complex enough that Mozart actually had to sketch it out in advance, one of the rare times in his life that he did so.

The graceful theme that opens the central Andante has some darker undercurrents: a purposeful bass line, passing dissonances, and a brief turn into the minor. In fact, as songful as the movement is, it also plumbs some surprising depths. The colors of the orchestra here, and throughout the work, are radiant – Prague was known for the quality of its wind players, and its audiences would have been pleased with how Mozart shows off the colors of the winds in this symphony.

The third movement is propulsive and impetuous, opening with a little hint of the duet "Aprite presto" from Figaro that must have caught the ears of the Prague audiences. The movement is one of contrasts – winds and strings, loud and soft, grace and drama. One writer remarks on how this music “must have been highly demanding of the players of the time, for Mozart assigns the orchestra parts requiring great agility, a refinement of phrasing, an attack and ensemble work that would push them to the limit.”

3 Comments:

Anonymous Raymond E.O.Ella said...

For a picture of a young Mozart and others, e.g., musician John Ella (1802-1888), etc., go to:

http://www.leicestershirevillages.com/leicester/gallery.html?user=11653&scope=leicestershire

Or,please type Raymond E.O.Ella in a www.google.co.uk searchbox and click, then go to page for "leicestershirevillages" and click.

For more on J.Ella, please go to:
http://www.hberlioz.com/others/RElla.htm

Regards,
Raymond & Marie Ella, (Mr. & Mrs.).

11:59 AM  
Anonymous Susan said...

Extra by R.E.O.Ella:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/84098662@N02/

a link by going to:
http://www.visitleicester.info/famous-people-from-leicester-shire/

Good pics.
Susan Leebrook.

10:24 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yes good pics by R.E.O.Ella including one of a young Mozart.
Wikidepia seem to get the musician John Ella's birthplace wrong. It was not Thirsk but Leicester has Mr. R.Ella correctly points-out. Wikipedia quote fro old and out-dated publications instead of doing their own research, this resulting in repeating any possible mistakes.

Sandra.

2:54 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home