Haydn circa 1770 Painting by Ludwig Guttenbrunn |
Back then, Haydn was in the early years of what would prove to be a long-term gig: music director for the rich and powerful Esterházy family. Prince Nikolaus Esterházy was an enthusiastic music lover--so much so that he maintained his own private orchestra, which Haydn was expected to conduct and for which he was expected to write music. Lots of it.
This could pose a challenge since, as Wikipedia reminds us, the personnel of the Esterházy orchestra fluctuated and so the forces Haydn had to work with varied considerably. Prior to 1765 the horn section, in particular, had taken some hits and was down to just two players. When the Prince finally agreed to Haydn's persistent requests to bring the section up to full strength by hiring two more players, the composer celebrated with his Symphony No. 31.
Natural (valveless) horn of Haydn's time Public Domain, Link |
Needless to say, it probably made a glorious noise back at the Esterházy estate. Adding to the jubilant atmosphere was the fact that the key of D major was commonly viewed as a celebratory key because it was so friendly to 18th-century trumpets and horns.
Indeed, in my experience it's impossible to listen to this symphony without a smile, and not just because the horns get to show off. In the course of its four movements, Haydn provides solo passages for flute, oboe, violin, cello, and even the bass. It's like a big orchestral party in which everyone gets a prize.
If I seem to be spending a lot of space on the Haydn, by the way, it's mostly because it hasn't been heard here since its first and only performance in 1973. So I'm assuming many of you won't have heard it before, at least in a live performance.
Beethoven by Joseph Karl Stieler, 1820 |
Haydn is mostly hiding in this work, though. It's ultimately all Beethoven. That's particularly obvious in the dramatic cadenza, written around 14 years after the concerto.
At the concert grand this weekend will be the young (b. 1994) South Korean virtuoso Seong-Jin Cho. A winner of the 2015 Chopin Competition in Warsaw, he gave his first public recital at the age of 11 and became the youngest-ever winner of Japan's Hamamatsu International Piano Competition in 2009. He already has three recordings with Deutsche Gramophon to his credit, ranging from Mozart sonatas and Chopin's Concerto No. 2 to solo works by Debussy. I look forward to seeing what he does with the Beethoven concerto.
Schubert by Wilhelm August Rieder Original is in Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien, Public Domain, Link |
Like the Beethoven concerto, the Fifth Symphony pays homage to Haydn and (especially) Mozart. Granted, it has some elements (particularly in the Andante con moto and Menuetto) that look forward to the more overtly Romantic sensibilities of the later Schubert and his successors. But on the whole it stands in marked contrast to his Symphony No. 4 in C minor, known as the "Tragic" because of its sense of high drama. Although written in the same year, the Fifth (as Clive Brown writes in notes for the Hanover Band's recording of the complete Schubert symphonies) "provides a delightful counterweight to the earnestness of its predecessor."
Mr. McGegan's presence on the podium can generally counted upon to add an upbeat element to the proceedings as well. A man who clearly enjoys his work, he has been known to briskly step up to the podium, his face alight with a cherubic smile. His body language shouts: "this is going to be FUN!" And it usually is.
The Essentials: Nicholas McGegan conducts The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, along with pianist Seong-Jin Cho on Saturday at 8 pm and Sunday at 3 pm, February 29 and March 1. Performances take place at Powell Symphony Hall in Grand Center.
This article originally appeared at 88.1 KDHX, where Chuck Lavazzi is the senior performing arts critic.
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