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Concerts of Thursday, May 2, and Saturday, May 4, at 8:00p, and Sunday, May 5, 2013, at 3:00p. Hugh Wolff, Conductor Marc-André Hamelin, Piano Thomas Adès (b. 1971) Dances from Powder Her Face (1995/2007) I. Overture II. Waltz III. Finale Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) Concerto No. 4 in G Major for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 58 (1806) I. Allegro moderato II. Andante con moto III. Rondo. Vivace Marc-André Hamelin, Piano Intermission Robert Schumann (1810-1856) Symphony No. 1 in B-flat Major, Opus 38, “Spring” (1841) I. Andante un poco maestoso; Allegro molto vivace II. Larghetto III. Scherzo. Molto vivace IV. Allegro animato e grazioso Notes on the Program by Ken Meltzer Dances from Powder Her Face (1995/2007) Thomas Adès was born in London, England, on March 1, 1971. The first performance of Dances from Powder Her Face took place at the Snape Maltings, Suffolk, England, as part of the Aldeburgh Festival, on June 17, 2007, with the composer conducting the Philharmonia Orchestra. Dances from Powder Her Face are scored for piccolo, three flutes, three oboes, three clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, glockenspiel, xylophone, two suspended cymbals, hi-hat cymbal, side drum, two kit bass drum, ordinary bass drum, roto-tom, three brake drums, tam-tam, triangle, three temple blocks, vibraslap, guiro, high bongos, washboard, tambourine, popgun, harp, piano and strings. Approximate performance time is eleven minutes. These are the first ASO Classical Subscription Performances. Powder Her Face, by the contemporary British composer, Thomas Adès, was commissioned and premiered by the Almedia Opera, an organization devoted to introducing new works for the lyric theater. The first performance of Powder Her Face took place at the Everyman Theater in Cheltenham, England on July 1, 1995, part of the Cheltenham Festival. Powder Her Face, with a libretto by Philip Hensher, and music by Mr. Adès, is based upon the life of Margaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll (1912-1993). A British socialite, Margaret Campbell (born, Ethel Margaret Whigham) married Ian Douglas Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll, in 1951. The marriage culminated in a scandalous divorce case, in which the Duke alleged the Duchess had relations with 88 different men, including celebrities, royals and members of government. The presiding Judge, Lord Wheatley, in ruling for the Duke, delivered a 65,000-word opinion, in which he described the Duchess as “a highly sexed woman who had ceased to be satisfied with normal sexual relations and had started to indulge in disgusting sexual activities to gratify a debased sexual appetite.” After the divorce in 1963, the Duchess of Argyll continued to be a prominent and visible member of society. But by 1990, the Duchess, owing £33,000 in rent, was evicted from her lavish penthouse at the Dorchester Hotel. The Duchess of Argyll died in a nursing home in 1993. Mr. Adès and Mr. Hensher envisioned the Duchess of Argyll as “all cladding—powder, scent, painting, furs—nothing inside.” Powder Her Face opens and concludes in 1990, with the Duchess’s eviction from her penthouse. Flashbacks present various episodes in the Duchess’s life, including her first meeting with the Duke, and the subsequent divorce proceedings. Powder Her Face was an immediate—and shocking—sensation. Part of the furor was caused by the opera’s graphic visual and musical portrayal of a sexual act. But Mr. Adès’s brilliant score, both remarkably original, and a tribute to great operas of the past, also galvanized audiences. The Aldeburgh Festival, the Philharmonia Orchestra, and the Cleveland Orchestra cocommissioned Dances from Powder Her Face. The composer, then Artistic Director of the Aldeburgh Festival, led the Philharmonia in the June 17, 2007 world premiere at Snape Maltings, Suffolk. The instrumental ensemble for Powder Her Face consists of fifteen musicians. For the Dances, Mr. Adès arranged music from the opera for full orchestra. I. Overture II. Waltz (attacca) III. Finale Concerto No. 4 in G Major for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 58 (1806) Ludwig van Beethoven was baptized in Bonn, Germany, on December 17, 1770, and died in Vienna, Austria, on March 26, 1827. The first public performance of the Piano Concerto No. 4 took place in Vienna at the Theater-an-der-Wien on December 22, 1808, with the composer as soloist. In addition to the solo piano, the Concerto No. 4 is scored for flute, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani and strings. Approximate performance time is thirty-four minutes. First ASO Classical Subscription Performance: March 21, 1951, Claudio Arrau, Piano, Henry Sopkin, Conductor. Most Recent ASO Classical Subscription Performances: September 30, October 1 and 2, 2010, Emanuel Ax, Piano, Robert Spano, Conductor. “Too much of a good thing” Beethoven completed the score of his G-Major Concerto in 1806, and first performed the work during a March 1807 private concert at the palace of his patron, Prince Joseph Lobkowitz. The first public performance of the Fourth Piano Concerto took place at the Vienna Theater-an-der-Wien on December 22, 1808. In addition to the Fourth Piano Concerto, the concert, sponsored by Beethoven, included the world premieres of the composer’s Fifth and Sixth Symphonies and Choral Fantasy, as well as four movements from his Mass in C and the soprano aria, Ah! Perfido. In a single evening, Beethoven lavished upon the Viennese public several hours of some of his most inspired compositions. Still, the benefit concert (known as an “Akademie”) was far from a resounding success. The meager rehearsal time was insufficient for a program of such length and difficulty. During the premiere of the Choral Fantasy, the orchestra was forced to stop in the middle of the work and begin a section over again. Further, the audience endured this taxing winter program in an unheated theater. The German musician Johann Reichardt was in attendance: I accepted with hearty thanks the kind offer of Prince Lobkowitz to let me sit in his box. There we continued, in the bitterest cold, too, from half past six to half past ten, and experienced the truth that one can easily have too much of a good thing—and still more of the loud. Nevertheless, I could no more leave the box before the end than could the exceedingly goodnatured and delicate Prince, for the box was in the first balcony near the stage, so that the orchestra with Beethoven in the middle conducting it was below us and near at hand; thus many a failure in the performance vexed our patience in the highest degree. Poor Beethoven, who from this, his own concert, was having the first and only scant profit that he could find in a whole year, had found in the rehearsals and performance a lot of opposition and almost no support. The Fourth Piano Concerto may have fared as well as any piece on the December 22, 1808 program. Beethoven was the soloist, and, according to Reichardt: “He played...with astounding cleverness and in the fastest possible tempi. The Adagio (i.e., second movement), a masterly movement of beautifully developed song, he sang on this instrument with a profound melancholy that moved me.” “Heights undreamt of in earlier music” The Fourth Piano Concerto proved to be the last such work Beethoven composed for his own performance. Increasing deafness finally made public appearances all but impossible for one of the greatest piano virtuosos of his time. Beethoven completed his magnificent Fifth Piano Concerto (“Emperor”) in 1809. The “Emperor,” Beethoven’s final Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, is certainly a fitting culmination of the composer’s efforts in this genre. Still, there are many advocates for the G-Major Concerto as the composer’s finest. It is a miraculous blend of haunting lyricism, expressive virtuosity and formal innovation. As British musicologist Sir Donald Francis Tovey observed: “Beethoven has now well and truly laid the foundations of his concerto form and is free to raise the edifice to heights undreamt of in earlier music.” Musical Analysis I. Allegro moderato—In Beethoven’s first three Piano Concertos, the composer follows traditional concerto sonata form, opening with a purely orchestral exposition. In the GMajor Concerto, it is the pianist who first softly intones the principal theme before it is repeated by the strings. After a majestic orchestral statement, the first violins introduce a lyrical but melancholy second theme that is soon transformed into a radiant orchestral tutti. The soloist returns with his own improvisational restatement of the principal thematic material. The soloist’s music is notable throughout for its remarkable combination of technical challenges and lyrical restraint. After the development, the soloist ushers in the recapitulation with a heroic restatement of his initial entrance. A lengthy cadenza and brief, dramatic coda round out the opening movement. II. Andante con moto—The brief slow movement is a dialogue between the strings and piano. The strings announce a forte, syncopated figure, to which the soloist responds with a tender phrase, marked molto cantabile. The confrontation proceeds until finally, the strings yield to the soloist. Franz Liszt compared this brief movement to “Orpheus taming the wild beasts with his music.” The finale ensues without pause. III. Rondo. Vivace—The dialogue between the strings and piano briefly continues with a furtive, pianissimo introduction of the principal Rondo theme. Soon, the orchestra proclaims a joyous, fortissimo restatement of the theme. Beethoven presents a remarkable variety of moods and instrumental colors throughout the finale. After a cadenza and series of trills, a moment of repose precedes the soloist and orchestra’s Presto dash to the finish. Symphony No. 1 in B-flat Major, Opus 38, “Spring” (1841) Robert Schumann was born in Zwickau, Germany, on June 8, 1810, and died in Endenich, Germany, on July 29, 1856. The first performance of the Symphony No. 1 took place at the Gewandhaus in Leipzig, Germany, on March 31, 1841, with Felix Mendelssohn conducting. The Symphony No. 1 is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, triangle and strings. Approximate performance time is thirty-one minutes. First ASO Classical Subscription Performance: January 25, 1948, Henry Sopkin, Conductor Most Recent ASO Classical Subscription Performances: February 28, March 1 and 2, 2002, Alan Gilbert, Conductor. Robert and Clara The early 1840s were glorious years for Robert Schumann. On September 12, 1840, the German composer wed his beloved Carla Wieck (1819-1896). The courtship had been a long and stressful one, as Clara’s father, Friedrich Wieck, vehemently opposed any union between his daughter and Robert. But, the day after the wedding (which was also Clara’s birthday), Robert was able to write the following in the couple’s joint diary: My most beloved young wife! Let me greet you with a tender kiss on this special day, the first of your womanhood, the first of your twenty-first year. The little book which I open herewith has a very particular, intimate meaning; it is to record everything that affects us together in our household and married life, our wishes, our hopes…your fair hopes and mine—may heaven bless them; your anxieties and mine…in short, all our hopes and sorrows… Robert’s union with Clara—a gifted pianist and composer—seemed to inspire the young composer’s creative powers. In the year of their marriage, Robert Schumann composed some 150 songs, including the glorious cycles Frauenliebe und -leben (A Woman’s Love and Life) and Dichterliebe (A Poet’s Love). In 1841, Robert Schumann focused his energies upon orchestral music. In the early portion of that year, Schumann completed his joyous “Spring” Symphony (No. 1 in B-flat Major, Opus 38). Schumann then composed his Overture, Scherzo and Finale, Opus 52. In May, Schumann penned a single-movement Fantasy in A minor for piano and orchestra (four years later, Schumann added an Intermezzo and Allegro vivace, transforming the Fantasy into the great Piano Concerto in A minor, Opus 54). In that same productive year of 1841, Schumann composed the original version of his Symphony No. 4 in D minor, Opus 120. “Under the urge of spring” Clara Schumann was a constant source of comfort and inspiration for her husband. But another source of inspiration contributed to the Symphony No. 1. On November 23, 1842, Schumann wrote to his friend, composer Ludwig Spohr: “I composed the symphony, so to speak, under the urge of spring which every year comes over men anew, even in full maturity.” On January 25, 1841, Clara wrote in the joint diary: “Today, Monday, Robert has nearly finished his Symphony. It was composed chiefly at night—for some nights my poor Robert has not slept on account of it. He calls it ‘Spring Symphony.’ A poem about Spring…was the first inspiration for this composition.” The poem in question, written by Adolf Böttger, concludes with the following lines: “O wende, wende deinen Lauf, —Im Tale blühet Frühling auf!” “O turn, turn aside your course, —Spring is blossoming in the vale!” Schumann sketched his “Spring” Symphony in the span of just four days, from January 23 to January 26, 1841. According to Schumann, he wrote the Symphony with a steel pen he found near Beethoven’s Vienna grave. Schumann completed the orchestration on February 20. Originally, the composer provided titles for each of the Symphony’s four movements: “(1) Spring’s Awakening,” “(2) Evening,” “(3) Happy Playfellows” and “(4) Spring’s Farewell.” Schumann later discarded those titles. The premiere of the “Spring” Symphony took place at the Leipzig Gewandhaus on March 31, 1841. Schumann’s friend, the great composer and conductor, Felix Mendelssohn, led the performance (Clara also performed on the concert as a pianist). It was a fine success, with the Symphony receiving a glowing reception from the audience. The “Spring” Symphony, with music as enticing and life-affirming as its subject, remains one of Robert Schumann’s most beloved compositions. Musical Analysis I. Andante un poco maestoso; Allegro molto vivace—The Symphony opens with a fanfare for trumpets and horns. Schumann directed: “I should like the very first trumpet call to sound as though it came up from on high, like a call to wake up.” The eight-note fanfare is based upon the final line of Böttger’s poem, reproduced below. The added bold type corresponds to the accents Schumann provides in the musical score: “Im Ta-le blü-het Früh-ling auf!” The orchestra repeats the fanfare motif. The slow introduction (Andante un poco maestoso) gathers momentum, leading to the principal Allegro molto vivace. Its opening theme is a lively figure, again based upon the fanfare. A more restrained, dolce motif, introduced by the clarinets and bassoons, serves as the second principal theme. The spirited development section concludes with a reprise of the opening fanfare. After a varied recapitulation, there is an extended coda, whose moments of repose are finally dispelled by a blazing dash to the finish. II. Larghetto—Divided first violins sing the radiant, central melody of this slow movement. The melody returns in various guises, alternating with more agitated episodes. A brief coda, featuring a trombone chorale, serves as the transition to the ensuing Scherzo, which follows without pause. III. Scherzo. Molto vivace—The Scherzo is based upon a brusque melody, introduced by the strings. There are two intervening Trio sections. The first (Molto più vivace) features a dialogue between strings and winds. The second Trio is a sort of perpetuum mobile in triple time. After a final reprise of the Scherzo, there is a mysterious coda, leading directly to the final movement. IV. Allegro animato e grazioso—The finale opens with a grand ascending unison passage that recalls the Symphony’s opening fanfare. After a dramatic pause, the violins offer the Finale’s impish first theme. The broad second theme is based upon an eight-note figure that, again, bears a kinship to the opening fanfare. The development section concludes with a sentinel passage for horns, followed by a cheerful cadenza for solo flute, which also inaugurates the ensuing recapitulation. A stirring coda brings the “Spring” Symphony to a bracing conclusion.