Richard Strauss at age 74, photographed in his garden at his country home at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, in 1938 en.wikipedia.org |
The concerts open with a pair of works for strings that, although composed over fifty years apart in completely different parts of the world, will be played together as a single unit. The result is a lovely hybrid that touches both the mind and the heart.
The first work is Strauss's "Metamorphosen" for 23 solo strings, first performed in 1946 but written largely between August 1944 and April 12, 1945—a time period that coincided with the ignominious collapse of Hitler's "Thousand-Year Reich." The music is a nearly half-hour lament for the destruction Germany brought upon itself and particularly for the bombing of the National Theatre—the home of the Bavarian State Opera, Orchestra, and Ballet—by the allies in 1943. Beginning with a slow, ascending sigh in the lower strings (violas, cellos, and double basses), the work unfolds over the next 26 minutes or so in a series of hopeful, romantic climaxes that always fall back into an undercurrent of lamentation, like the pleasant memories returning in the moments before death that you hear in Strauss's "Death and Transfiguration" from nearly 60 years earlier. Towards the end, the composer quotes the Marche Funebre from Beethoven's "Eroica" (accompanied by the words “IN MEMORIAM!” in the printed score) before fading to a quiet, resigned conclusion.
If you want to get acquainted with it in advance, there's a recording on YouTube by Antoni Wit and the Staatskapelle Weimar with a synchronized display of the score—very useful for a work with as much counterpoint as this one.
Takashi Yoshimatsu |
That makes it a perfect companion for the "Metamorphosen." "In his piece," observes Mr. Denève,"the sound of birdsong gives hope. The world has known many wars, many tragic events, but birds have sung all along." As someone who has been known to take comfort in the sounds of the many songsters attracted to our back garden (which my wife has made very bird friendly by her choice of plants and water features), I couldn't agree more.
But don't take my word for it. You can hear a performance of "And the Birds Are Still..." with a synchronized display of the score on YouTube. It's a lovely thing and well worth getting acquainted with in advance.
Antonín Dvořák, 1882 - This image comes from Gallica Digital Library and is available under the digital ID btv1b8417521d, Public Domain |
To conclude the concert, the strings will clear the stage to make
room for ten of the SLSOs wind players (two each of oboes and
clarinets, two bassoons, a contrabassoon, and three horns), who will
regale us with Dvořák's D-minor Serenade, Op. 44. Composed in only
two weeks in January of 1878 (the first movement was completed in
one day) just as the 37-year-old composer's career was taking off
thanks to a helpful boost from Brahms, the Serenade is, its opening
key not withstanding, a warmly cheerful piece. Dvořák was inspired
to write it after hearing a Vienna Philharmonic performance of
Mozart's Serenade No. 10, K. 371/370a, and while Mozart's
influence is clearly audible, especially at the beginning of the Andante
con moto third movement, the music is still quintessentially
Dvořák.
What does that mean? Well, the Moderato quasi marcia
first movement is a jaunty march to which the minor key imparts an
air of mock pomposity. It's like the village band dressing up in
deliberately silly costumes and marching through the town square to
kick off a festival. The Menuetto second movement is an
obvious tip of the hat to Wolfgang Amadeus, but the opening section
is more of a Czech sousedská than a minuet, and the zippy
central section is obviously a whirling furiant of the sort that pops up often
in Dvořák's music. The Andante con moto third movement opens
with a tune so similar to the beginning of Mozart's Serenade that it
comes close to imitation, but the dramatic central trio is typical
of the unexpected sturm und drang that we hear in many of
the Czech master's slow movements (the eighth and ninth symphonies
are good examples). The finale wraps it all up with a lively
polka-like dance with a recapitulation of the opening march that
leads to a big, happy finish.
Originally composed for winds alone, the Serenade later got
additional parts for double bass and cello (presumably to add more
"bottom" to the sound), but this week we'll get the original version
without strings. I expect that contrabassoon will give us all the
bass notes we need.
The Essentials: Stéphane Denève conducts the St. Louis
Symphony Orchestra in the second of a series of special chamber
orchestra
concerts this Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 pm with an
additional performance on Friday at 11 am, October 22-24.
The program, which will run
about an hour with no intermission, consists of Richard Strauss's
"Metamorphosen" for 23 Solo Strings, TrV 290; Takashi Yoshimatsu's
"And birds are still...," op. 72; and Antonín Dvořák's Serenade in D
minor, op. 44.
Audience size will be limited to 100 for each performance and
tickets can only be purchased by calling the SLSO box office at
314-534-1700. Only two tickets can be purchased per household.
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