Showing posts with label tone poem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tone poem. Show all posts

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Symphony Preview: Tales of the unexpected

Former Music Director Leonard Slatkin, who led the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (SLSO) during what was possibly its period of highest international visibility (and who is now a resident of Our Fair City once again) returns to lead the SLSO this weekend (Saturday and Sunday, October 12 and 13) in an evening of works which all have intriguing histories.

The concert opens with a new version of a piece that Mr. Slatkin originally commissioned in 1996, his final year with the orchestra. As a kind of farewell present, he asked four composers who had been in residence at the SLSO during his tenure--Joseph Schwantner, Joan Tower, Donald Erb, and Claude Baker--to each create a different variation on the "Caprice No. 24" by Niccoló Paganini. Slatkin wrote one of his own as well and titled the result "Yet Another Set of Variations (on a Theme of Paganini)."

Leonard Slatkin
As Mr. Slatkin approached his 75th birthday (which, interestingly, falls on the same date as mine...) he thought a revision might be in order. Here's what he did, from his program notes for this weekend:
:
I invited five orchestras where I have held a position of artistic leadership to commission five composers with whom I have shared a close collaboration over the course of my career. Specifically, the SLSO invited John Corigliano to contribute a new variation, as it was with that orchestra that I first conducted and recorded John's music. Composer Truman Harris served as assistant principal bassoon in the National Symphony and assisted me in orchestrating several works I wrote for that ensemble. Guillaume Connesson was resident composer with the Orchestre National de Lyon during my tenure. Cindy McTee, aka Mrs. Slatkin, was closely associated with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Daniel Slatkin is my son and a composer for motion pictures and television. His variation was commissioned by the Nashville Symphony, one of the most active recording orchestras in the country.
Mr. Slatkin revised his earlier variation and wrote additional material to tie everything together, and we'll hear this result this weekend.

It's worth noting that Paganini's original caprice includes some pretty fancy variations of its own, as you can both see and hear in a YouTube video featuring violinist Salvatore Accardo and including images of the sheet music synched with his performance. The 24th caprice has proved to be irresistible as the basis for more variations by a wide variety of composers from Brahms to Eugène Ysaÿe. Rachmaninoff's "Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini" is probably the most well known of the lot, even producing a romantic tune (in variation 18) that has had a life of its own, including a brief run as the accompaniment for (if my memory is correct) a Folger's coffee commercial.

Pop and jazz songwriters have gotten into the act as well. Most notably, Andrew Lloyd Webber made Paganini's tune the basis of his 1977 "Variations," recorded in 1978 with his brother Julian Lloyd Webber as the soloist. That set of variations, like Rachmaninoff's, also produced a little earworm of a melody that eventually grew lyrics courtesy of Don Black and got the title "Unexpected Song."

Mozart, as drawn by Doris Stock, 1789
Speaking of things unexpected, for nearly 150 years, nobody expected to hear Mozart's K. 314 Oboe Concerto for the simple reason that it had simply dropped out of sight after Anton Meyer, an oboist in Prince Esterhàzy's orchestra, requested a copy for his own use in 1883. It was chalked up as a lost work until 1920. In notes for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Phillip Huscher describes what happened then:
In 1920, Mozart scholar and conductor Bernhard Paumgartner, who was director of the Salzburg Mozarteum archives, discovered a package of old orchestral parts. The bass part was marked "Concerto in C/Oboe Principale" followed by Mozart's name. When Paumgartner recognized the music, however, as the familiar flute concerto in D major--the one flutists had long counted as the second of Mozart's two concertos--a 137-year-old mystery began to unravel. Apparently, sometime during the winter of 1777-78, Mozart had made an arrangement of the oboe concerto in order to make fast work of a commission for the amateur flutist Ferdinand de Jean, probably passing the recycled work off as brand new. By exposing Mozart's fraud, Paumgartner's find simultaneously cut Mozart's flute concerto output in two and handed oboists a concerto they had never expected to play.
This weekend will be the first time the concerto has been played by the SLSO (although the SLSO Youth Orchestra did it in 1987, with Mr. Slatkin conducting). The soloist will be SLSO Principal Oboe Jelena Dirks. In a brief email interview, I asked her if playing a piece written for the somewhat simpler oboe of Mozart's day posed any challenges. Her answer was surprising and educational:
Interestingly enough, the Classical period oboe is much more closely related to the modern oboe than the Baroque oboe. Much of the progress that has been made since Mozart's era lies simply in the addition of keys. While keys are meant to make things easier (especially in the complicated, more adventurous compositions of the Romantic and Contemporary eras) they also have some intriguing consequences. One of the biggest changes which resulted is that they even out the colors of different notes. However, the fact is, even to this day, no two notes sound alike on the oboe. That is one of the best and also one of the trickiest things about the oboe! I learned to revel in the differences of sound, to use it when I think it's effective and to hide it when I don't want it.
So what does that all mean in the context of this particular Mozart concerto? Ms. Dirks elaborated:
[T]he opening phrase is a trill, a scale, and then a high c (a brilliant note on the oboe). It is fun to exercise this note and to explore the open nature of the c- as in allegro aperto (open) from the first movement tempo marking. In the vocal second movement, I try for as close to singing an opera aria as I can get. In the third movement, the writing is such that it portrays the bright joyfulness of C major on the oboe. So, to answer your question the long way around, it is more about embracing the qualities of the oboe than anything else!
Jelena Dirks
Photo courtesy of SLSO
The qualities of the oboe, in fact, are what attracted Ms. Dirks to the instrument in the first place. "I come from a family of professional string players," she notes, "and when my mom hosted a baby shower for one of her friends (yes, an oboist!) I was eager to try something no one else in my family played."
Sometime during the party I remember a conversation in which my mom's friend asked me to try making the embouchure for an oboe, and then told me that "I would make a perfect oboist." I don't remember knowing what an oboe was, my ten year old self simply thought 'wow, can I please play that?'...I think it's safe to say that I continued playing oboe because I do thrive on a challenge and I also fell in love with the sound and the expressive nature of the instrument and repertoire.
"Expressive" is certainly a word you might use to describe the final work on the program, Richard Strauss's 1899 "Ein Heldenleben" ("A Hero's Life"). It's one of the more impressive examples of musical egotism, right up there with Berlioz's "Symphonie Fantastique". Despite the composer's disclaimer that the work was only party autobiographical and that it was intended to be "a more general and free ideal of great and manly heroism," there's not much doubt that Strauss' hero was Strauss. The work is chock full of quotes from Strauss' music and its portrayal of music critics by a gaggle of chattering woodwinds provoked the expected outrage from the composer's detractors.

As Richard Freed observes in program notes for The Kennedy Center, Strauss eventually had to admit the hero in "Ein Heldenleben" was, in fact, himself:
Strauss did concede, after all, in a remark to the writer Romain Rolland, that he found himself "no less interesting than Napoleon," and his gesture of conducting the premiere himself instead of leaving that honor to the respected dedicatee may well be viewed as further confirmation of the work's self-congratulatory character.
That said, "Ein Heldenleben" is such a lavish and dramatic work that it ultimately doesn't matter whether Strauss meant it as a symphonic selfie or not. "A Hero's Life," writes Mr. Freed, "represented in its time a new level in the exploitation of the resources of the modern orchestra, and it remains an outstanding landmark in that respect." It uses a massive orchestra of over 100 players (some of whom will be offstage for the big "battle" sequence, in which The Hero vanquishes his enemies) and includes infrequently heard instruments like the B-flat and E bass clarinets, the tenor tuba, and the contrabassoon. The sheer volume and variety of sound is impressive.

The Essentials: Leonard Slatkin conducts The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra along with Principal Oboe Jelena Dirks in Mozart's Oboe Concerto, K. 314; Richard Strauss's "Ein Heldenleben"; and "Yet Another Set of Variations (on a Theme of Paganini)." Performances are Saturday at 8 pm, and Sunday at 3 pm October 12 and 13 at Powell Symphony Hall in Grand Center.

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Symphony Preview: London calling

Edward Elgar, circa 1900
en.wikipedia.org
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The big solo work on the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra program Thanksgiving weekend may be German, but the prevailing musical mood is British, with major works by Edward Elgar and Ralph Vaughan Williams opening and closing the concerts.

The evening will open with Elgar's "In the South (Alassio)," a bold, sweeping tone poem that is the composer's love letter to Italy in general and in particular to the Italian Rivera town where the composer and his wife were vacationing in the winter of 1903-1904. In a February 1904 letter to Percy Pitt and Alfred Kalisch (cited in Jerrold Northrup Moore's "Edward Elgar: A Creative Life," 1986) the composer recalled his sources of inspiration:
The shepherd with his flock and his home-made music: the massive bridge and road still useful, and to a reflective mind awe-inspiring: the music developed to paint the relentless and domineering onward force of the ancient day and give a sound-picture of the strife and wars ('the drums and tramplings') of a later time: streams, flowers, hills; the distant snow mountains in one direction and the blue Mediterranean in the other.

In a flash it all came to me - the conflict of the armies on that very spot long ago, where now I stood - the contrast of the ruin and the shepherd - and then, all of a sudden, I came back to reality. In that time I had composed the overture - the rest was merely writing it down."
One notable aspect of the overture is a long serenade for viola in the quiet central section. It's irresistibly beautiful. Elgar liked it so much that he re-used it later in 1904 for the song "In Moonlight" (to a text by Shelley) and made several arrangements of the tune for various combinations of instruments.

As Wayne Reisig writes at allmusic.com, inspiration for the overture came at a time when "the public was eagerly awaiting the composer's first symphony, but Elgar's self-criticism led him to put a partially completed symphony on hold. He then offered up the present work, the longest single symphonic movement he had written up to that point." He might have been wise to wait; when he finally premiered that first symphony in 1908 it was, according to The Musical Times, an "immediate and phenomenal success." The colorful orchestration and subject matter inevitably led to comparisons with Richard Strauss's "Aus Italien" from two decades earlier but ultimately this music could only have come from Elgar.

Ralph Vaughan Williams
in 1922
This weekend's concerts conclude with another vivid evocation of a specific place, Vaughan Williams's "A London Symphony." Originally composed in 1912 and then revised multiple times (the version you'll hear this weekend dates from 1934), the work was inspired, as René Spencer Saller relates in her program notes, by a conversation with Vaughan Williams's fellow composer George Butterworth. Here's how Vaughan Williams recalled the event:
"We were talking together one day when he said in his gruff, abrupt manner: 'You know, you ought to write a symphony'. I answered... that I'd never written a symphony and never intended to... I suppose Butterworth's words stung me and, anyhow, I looked out some sketches I had made for... a symphonic poem about London and decided to throw it into symphonic form.... I can never feel too grateful to him for all he did for me over this work, and his help did not stop short at criticism."
Although the work strongly evokes specific locations in London and even includes a quote of the Westminster chimes, the composer strongly resisted the idea that it was programmatic music. "The title A London Symphony may suggest to some hearers a descriptive piece," wrote the composer in a program note for the first performance of the work in 1920, "but this is not the intention of the composer. A better title would perhaps be 'Symphony by a Londoner,'; that is to say, the life of London has suggested to the composer an attempt at musical expression; but it would be no help to the hearer to describe these in words. The music is intended to be self-expressive, and must stand or fall as "absolute" music. Therefore, if listeners recognize suggestions of such things as the 'Westminster Chimes' or the 'Lavender Cry,' [a tune sung by lavender sellers in London] they are asked to consider these as accidents, not essentials of the music."

It is, in any case, a tremendously appealing work with, as David Cox writes in "The Symphony" (Penguin Books, 1967) a wide emotional range that runs "from raucousness to quiet brooding, from bright pageantry to sinister undertones--and the musical ideas are as copious as in Elgar." Personally, I have always found the tranquil Lento second movement to be a truly beautiful thing. The composer, in a 1925 program note, wrote that the movement "has been called 'Bloomsbury Square on a November afternoon'" but then went on to note that this "may serve as a clue to the music, but it is not a necessary 'explanation' of it.

Fair enough. Great music can be described in words, but the words can never fully capture the experience of hearing the music itself. "A London Symphony" is ultimately its own creature--and a very fine one it is.

Max Bruch
en.wikipedia.org
Concluding the first half of the concerts will Max Bruch's 1866 Violin Concerto No. 1. It's Bruch's most popular work which, as I wrote in my preview article for the last performance of the piece here in 2014 is a pity, since he never made a dime from it. It is, in any case, a warm, heartfelt, and utterly irresistible work that marries virtuoso flash with genuine emotion. The Adagio second movement, in particular, is a piece of almost heartbreaking beauty.

In 2014 the soloist was our own Concertmaster David Halen, with Leonard Slatkin on the podium. This time around the soloist is Joshua Bell who is, as his biography in the program reminds us, "one of the most celebrated violinists of his era." He last appeared here September 2015, playing Lalo's popular "Symphonie espagnole." On the podium will be Michael Francis, the Music Director of The Florida Orchestra and San Diego's Mainly Mozart Festival, who is making his local debut.

The Essentials: Michael Francis conducts the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and violinist Joshua Bell Friday and Saturday at 8 pm and Sunday at 3 pm, November 23 - 25. The program consists of Elgar's overture "In the South (Alassio)", Bruch's Violin Concerto No. 1, and Vaughan Williams' "A London Symphony". Performances take place at Powell Hall in Grand Center.

Saturday, November 03, 2018

St. Louis classical calendar for the week of November 5, 2018

The Arianna String Quartet
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The University of Missouri - St. Louis presents What makes a Classic? An Evening with Schubert and Beethoven on Monday, November 5, at 7:30 pm. "The Arianna Quartet joins forces with UMSL philosophy theorist and aesthetics scholar, Dr. Stephanie Ross, for an inspiring and entertaining look at the inner workings of how great compositions and live performance come together to create lasting masterpieces. What makes a musical masterpiece a masterpiece, or a movie, or book, or even a building, truly great? Why do we enjoy revisiting favorite works again and again? If we treat favorite works like cherished friends, what determines which new works we can come to love? Do we ever outgrow works we once admired? Don't miss this opportunity to join the ASQ and philosopher Stephanie Ross at UMSL Grand Center for a thought provoking evening of performance and insight that is sure to change how you see and hear the world around you." The event takes place at UMSL's Grand Center Location. For more information: stlpublicradio.org.

The Chamber Music Society of St. Louis presents For the Birds on Monday and Tuesday, November 5 and 6, at 7:30 pm. "Birds have fascinated many composers. This program features some of the more appealing outcomes, composed by Haydn, Vaughan-Williams, Daquin, Saint-Saëns, Schumann and Grieg." The concert takes place at the Sheldon Concert Hall, 3648 Washington in Grand Center. For more information: chambermusicstl.org.

Stéphane Denève
Stéphane Denève conducts the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and mezzo-soprano Kelley O'Connor Saturday at 8 pm and Sunday at 3 pm, November 10 and 11. "Making his first appearance as Music Director Designate, Stéphane Denève leads the SLSO in Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy, expressing a celebration of a collective joy in an exuberant orchestration. Plus, the orchestra performs two stories of passion and love with selections from Wagner's Tristan and Isolde and Berlioz's Romeo and Juliet." Performances take place at Powell Hall in Grand Center. For more information: stlsymphony.org.

The Sheldon Concert Hall presents the Los Angeles Guitar Quartet on Thursday, November 8, at 8 pm. “Grammy Award-winning LAGQ is comprised of four uniquely accomplished musicians bringing a new energy to the concert stage with programs ranging from bluegrass to Bach. Their inventive, critically acclaimed transcriptions of concert masterworks provide a fresh look at the music of the past, while their interpretations of works from the contemporary and world-music realms continually break new ground.” The Sheldon is at 3648 Washington in Grand Center. For more information: thesheldon.org.

The Washington University Department of Music presents a concert of music by Mozart and Vincent Persichetti on Sunday, November 11, at 7 pm. The program features St. Louis Symphony Orchestra musicians Franklin Cohen, clarinet, with Beth Guterman Chu, viola, Bjorn Ranheim, cello, and Peter Henderson, piano. The concert takes place at the 560 Music Center at 560 Trinity in University City. For more information, music.wustl.edu.