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PROGRAM NOTES
by Phillip Huscher
Zoltán Kodály
Born December 16, 1882, Kecskemét, Hungary.
Died March 6, 1967, Budapest, Hungary.
Concerto for Orchestra
Kodály composed the Concerto for Orchestra in 1939 and 1940, on a commission from the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra, to honor its fiftieth anniversary. The first performance was given by the Orchestra,
under Frederick Stock, on February 6, 1941. The score calls for three flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two
clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, triangle, harp,
and strings. Performance time is approximately twenty-two minutes.
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra gave the world premiere performances of Kodály's Concerto for
Orchestra (commissioned for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's fiftieth season) on subscription concerts
at Orchestra Hall on February 6 and 7, 1941, with Frederick Stock conducting. Our most recent
subscription concert performances were given on December 18, 19, and 20, 1986, with Erich Leinsdorf
conducting.
To most musicians today, the title “concerto for orchestra” suggests Béla Bartók's landmark 1943 score of
that name. Bartók's is the most celebrated, but it's neither the first nor the last work with this title. Paul
Hindemith, Walter Piston, and Zoltán Kodály all wrote concertos for orchestra before Bartók, and Witold
Lutoslawski (whose work closes this concert), Michael Tippett, Elliott Carter, Joan Tower, Shulamit Ran,
and Magnus Lindberg are among those who have done so after his famous example. (The American
composer Steve Stucky has even written two concertos for orchestra, the second one winning the 2005
Pulitzer Prize for Music.)
Zoltán Kodály, one of the few to precede Bartók in this form, wrote his Concerto for Orchestra on a
commission from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra to honor its fiftieth anniversary. (He had recently
written two of his most popular works as anniversary tributes: the Dances of Galánta to honor the
Budapest Philharmonic, and the Peacock Variations for Amsterdam's Concertgebouw.)
The Chicago Symphony went all out to celebrate its jubilee season by commissioning an impressive
group of new pieces for the occasion. Music director Frederick Stock, who had been conducting the
orchestra for more than thirty years (he had played in its viola section for ten years before that),
approached seven composers then living in the United States, including Igor Stravinsky, Roy Harris, and
Chicagoan John Alden Carpenter. (Stock himself, an off-hours composer, agreed to contribute a work as
well.) In the summer of 1939, with the threat of war on the horizon, Stock went to Europe to get signed
contracts from six more internationally known figures: Alfredo Casella of Italy, William Walton of England,
Darius Milhaud of France, Reinhold Glière and Nicholas Miaskowski of Russia, and Hungary's Zoltán
Kodály.
Kodály's Concerto for Orchestra was premiered under Stock's baton in February 1941, midway through
the Orchestra's fiftieth season. (The series of commissions had been launched on opening night that
October by Stock's Festival Fanfare.) The then-novel concept of a concerto for orchestra needed
explanation, and the program notes reminded listeners that “the word 'concerto' is used here, not in the
sense of a brilliant and showy composition for a solo instrument, or instruments, with symphonic
accompaniment, but in the original employment of the word to denote a combination of instruments.”
Although the Concerto for Orchestra is a quintessentially modern form—an “invention” of the midtwentieth century—its roots can be traced back to baroque works such as Bach's First and Third
Brandenburg concertos, which pass the solo opportunities around from section to section.
Kodaly's score is an arresting combination of baroque architecture and Hungarian folk material. Stock told
The New York Times that he felt the entire work was imbued with Hungarian rhythm, “with all the
elements of gypsy music developed to the last degree along the lines of symphony pattern.” This
concerto is a single span of music, divided into distinct sections. The way it alternates full orchestral
paragraphs with passages for selected soloists is an obvious throwback to the concerto grosso of Bach's
time. It begins, not unlike one of the Brandenburgs, with a unison statement of the main theme. In the
opening Allegro risoluto section, the solo spotlight falls first on the individual winds, then the brass, later a
single violin. The spacious, measured Largo that follows begins with solos for various string instruments,
answered by the clarinet. As other instruments enter, this eventually grows from a rich and varied kind of
chamber music into a dramatic symphonic slow movement. What happens next is partly recapitulation,
with a return to the spirited opening material, this time highlighted by new solos and new adventures,
followed by another Largo, more concentrated than the last. There is a short, full orchestral sprint to the
final measure.
Phillip Huscher is the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
© Chicago Symphony Orchestra. All rights reserved. Program notes may be reproduced only in their
entirety and with express written permission from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
These notes appear in galley files and may contain typographical or other errors. Programs subject to
change without notice.