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Richard Tognetti Tuesday 15 November 2016 7.30pm Milton Court Concert Hall Arvo Pärt Fratres Beethoven Violin Sonata in F major, Op 24 ‘Spring’ interval 20 minutes Sculthorpe Irkanda I Brahms Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108 Mick Bruzzese Richard Tognetti violin Polina Leschenko piano Part of Barbican Presents 2016–17 Programme produced by Harriet Smith; printed by Mandatum Ink; advertising by Cabbell (tel. 020 3603 7930) Confectionery and merchandise including organic ice cream, quality chocolate, nuts and nibbles are available from the sales points in our foyers. Please turn off watch alarms, phones, pagers etc during the performance. Taking photographs, capturing images or using recording devices during a performance is strictly prohibited. The City of London Corporation is the founder and principal funder of the Barbican Centre If anything limits your enjoyment please let us know during your visit. Additional feedback can be given online, as well as via feedback forms or the pods located around the foyers. Welcome Tonight is the first concert given by Richard Tognetti, this season’s Artist-in-Residence at Milton Court Concert Hall. He is a musician who refuses to be pigeonholed, equally at home directing the Australian Chamber Orchestra (with which he has been associated since 1989), creating large-scale multi-media projects or performing as a soloist on period, modern or electric violin. This evening we hear him as a recitalist, joined by Polina Leschenko at the piano. They offer a strikingly wide-ranging programme, which takes us from Beethoven’s mellifluous ‘Spring’ Sonata and Brahms’s Third Violin Sonata to the 20th century. Arvo Pärt’s Fratres may need little introduction, having become one of his most frequently performed pieces, but Irkanda I by Richard’s compatriot Peter Sculthorpe is distinctly less familiar. We look forward to welcoming Richard back on 24 November for a collaboration with electronic artists from the Guildhall School, in which he is also joined by fellow violinist Satu Vänskä to reimagine a range of music from Kaija Saariaho to Aphex Twin. For the second part of his residency in March next year, he brings the wonderful Australian Chamber Orchestra to Milton Court for three concerts featuring music by Pe-teris Vasks, Shostakovich and Mozart, and The Reef: a live music and filmic exploration of Australia’s rich natural coastline. I hope you enjoy tonight’s concert. Huw Humphreys, Head of Music, Barbican Barbican Classical Music Podcasts 2 Stream or download our Barbican Classical Music podcasts for exclusive interviews from some of the finest artists in classical music. Recent podcasts include Jonathan Biss, John Adams, Gerald Barry, Barbara Hannigan, Sir James MacMillan, George Benjamin, Andrew Norman, Iestyn Davies, Joyce DiDonato and Nico Muhly. Available on the Acast app, iTunes, Soundcloud and the Barbican website Fratres (1977, rev 1980) Instead, as he entered his maturity as a composer, Pärt began to find inspiration in more obscure, more distant musical traditions – in Gregorian chant, medieval and Renaissance composers, the early Dutch school and Josquin, and perhaps most dangerously for a composer brought up in a Soviet state, in music deriving from religious exaltation. A whole new genre, sometimes labelled ‘holy minimalism’, began to emerge around him and other composers such as Tavener and Górecki. With works such as Spiegel im Spiegel and Cantus in memoriam Benjamin Britten Pärt began to put Estonia on the map as an important modern musical nation – a status it still maintains today despite the composer himself having left in 1980, moving first to Vienna and then to Berlin. Pärt’s Fratres is not so much a composition as a musical franchise, a catch-all title that has been applied to a work originally composed in 1977 for string quintet, wind quintet and percussion but which has subsequently been re-composed for various ensembles ranging from string quartet to solo violin, strings and percussion, cello and piano, 12 cellos, an early-music ensemble, and this celebrated version for violin and piano, made in 1980. Essentially, the main thematic material of Fratres is a hymn played over a drone, growing ever richer in texture and developing into a state of profound peace and beauty. At once simple and intricate, it has the character of an internal meditation yet at the same time, almost miraculously, possesses an innate popular appeal. An explanation for the apparent contradiction may lie in Pärt’s early career, when for a decade or more he worked as a sound engineer for Estonian Radio, a role which not only saw him exposed to the widest possible variety of musical genres, but keenly attuned his ears to the nuances of music as ‘sound’. His development of a musical style now known as tintinnabuli – in which melodies move step by step over an arpeggio, as if in imitation of ringing bells – combines expressiveness with a glistening surface, hypnotic and compelling. Fratres and that other huge hit, Spiegel im Spiegel, are early examples of the technique. Interestingly, the tintinnabuli style is less obvious in the violin and piano version of Fratres than in some other incarnations of the piece. Rather, the work emerges as a series of variations separated by contemplative interludes. But always there is a sense of the silence that attends upon the dying of a note. As Pärt himself has said, ‘My music was always written after I had long been silent in the most literal sense of the word. When I speak of silence, I mean the “nothingness” out of which God created the world. That is why, ideally, musical silence is sacred.’ And perhaps it’s that connection with, and striving towards, pure silence that has made Pärt such a cult figure, and Fratres such a deeply communicative work, in our ceaselessly noisy and frantic modern world. 3 There can be few composers whose musical origins and influences are as diverse as those of the Estonian Arvo Pärt. His teacher Heino Eller was himself a former pupil of Glazunov and the great Russian 19th-century masters. Pärt actually began his career as a drummer in the Soviet military, before discovering the music of Shostakovich and Prokofiev, and later embarking on experiments in serialism. But none of that left a long-lasting influence on his music. Programme notes Arvo Pärt (born 1935) Ludwig van Beethoven (1770–1827) Violin Sonata No 5 in F major, Op 24 ‘Spring’ (1800–1) 1 Allegro . 2 Adagio molto espressivo 3 Scherzo: Allegro molto – Trio . 4 Rondo: Allegro ma non troppo The fifth of Beethoven’s sonatas for piano and violin was published in 1801, the same year as its predecessor, Op 23 in A minor. Whereas that work was troubled, agitated and difficult, the F major Sonata is sunny, equable and fresh; though its ‘Spring’ nickname was not Beethoven’s own, it fits better than many others applied by third parties to his music. Among nearcontemporary works, the Piano Sonata, Op 28 is somewhat similar in mood, while Beethoven later revisited the key of F major for the development of similar sentiments on a far greater scale in the Sixth Symphony. This is not to say that the ‘Spring’ Sonata is a small-scale work. Not only is it the first of Beethoven’s violin sonatas to have four movements, but each except the Scherzo is developed with considerable breadth. The very opening idea combines breadth and flowing lyricism, belying the fact that it took Beethoven some effort to fashion its final form, which combines spontaneity and inevitability. The character of the movement is thus set from the outset – though there is some agitation and drama later, particularly when the recapitulation turns towards the second subject group. The basic contrast is between the essentially melodic first idea and a more broken up, dramatically exchanged second subject. The main theme returns in the coda where its first bar is developed, setting its seal even more firmly on the movement. The slow movement, in B flat major, is again distinguished by breadth of phrase and warm feeling, though the mood is more serious. Its exposition is exceptionally closely shared by the instruments, each doing what it does best; the violin detaching itself to present the first theme cantabile, the piano heightening the intensity by varying it with repeated notes. In concluding the dialogue with trills on both instruments Beethoven provides an early example of his ability to raise a decorative device to an expressive function. The Scherzo is one of breathtaking concision, abruptly contrasting a syncopated exchange (the violin following the piano a beat behind) with a Trio in rapidly running notes. In the last movement there’s a return to the lyricism and flow of the first. Formally this is a rondo, and because of the subtlety with which the refrain is altered and variously shaped, the effect is of almost uninterrupted development and variation. The contrast comes when, in the second couplet of the rondo, the music shifts into D minor. When the refrain returns some remote keys are explored before the effervescent coda brings the sonata to a fitting end. 4 interval 20 minutes Irkanda I (1955) Born and schooled in Launceston, Tasmania, he undertook further studies at Melbourne University, under Bernard Heinze, and at Oxford, where in 1958 his tutor, composer Edmund Rubbra, prophetically dubbed him ‘Australia’s Bartók’. Another English mentor, musicologist Wilfred Mellers, saw that it was paradoxically at Oxford that the homesick young Antipodean ‘discovered his true identity, becoming the first composer to make a music distinctively Australian’. Indeed, Sculthorpe established the connection between music and his native country as one of his artistic goals. Many of his works were given Aboriginal titles or were nourished by Aboriginal legends. This is particularly true of many of his early works, including Irkanda I, dating from 1955. The title means a distant and secluded place. It was the first part of a larger cycle written over a period of six years that was dedicated to Wilfred Lehmann, who first performed it at the Lisbon Mozart Festival in 1956. Irkanda I reflects many of Sculthorpe’s characteristics: the formal conception of the work is that of a free fantasy; an elegiac tone prevails; the melodic lines are very expansive; and the numerous sliding notes recall birdsong, creating a close connection with nature. Peter Sculthorpe wrote of the work: ‘Irkanda I is in one movement, and in it, long, melodic lines and bird-sounds are contrasted with brittle, rhythmic sections. The opening melody follows a 360-degree contour of the hills around Canberra, where most of the work was written. It might be added that my use of bird-song stems from suggestions in the writings of Henry Tate.’ 5 Peter Sculthorpe was Australia’s foremost classical composer, and one of the country’s most original and distinctive creative voices in any medium. Programme notes Peter Sculthorpe (1929–2014) Johannes Brahms (1833–97) Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor, Op 108 (1886–8) 1 Allegro . 2 Adagio 3 Un poco presto e con sentimento . 4 Presto agitato In the summer of 1886 Brahms rented the top floor of a farmhouse near Hofstetten in Switzerland, on the shore of the picturesque Lake Thun. It seems to have been a peaceful, productive time, and he returned there the following two summers. Works begun in his first visit include the Second Cello Sonata, the Piano Trio in C minor, Op 101 and the Violin Sonatas Nos 2 and 3. His stay in 1887 brought forth the Ziegeunerlieder and the Double Concerto. The next year unfortunately saw very little new music: Brahms was unsettled and felt the area had become too touristy. However, he did complete the Third Violin Sonata, which is a striking work, on a larger and more passionate scale than its two more intimate companions. Unlike Brahms’s other violin sonatas it is in four movements rather than three. There is an interesting (though unsubstantiated) story that it was meant to be a character study of its dedicatee, the conductor and pianist Hans von Bülow. If so, we can perhaps glimpse in the music the contemporary descriptions of von Bülow – the ‘passionate intellectuality’ of his playing, ‘his restless, brilliant mind and his reckless energy [which] blow like a north wind, brisk and refreshing, through the stagnant complacency of our everyday musical life’. 6 A more obvious link to von Bülow is the virtuosity and outspoken nature of the piano part. Of all Brahms’s duo sonatas, this is arguably the one where the two players form the most gracious partnership. There is however an overriding sense of melancholy to the sonata – D minor is traditionally regarded as one of the saddest keys. It is a work that seems to seek to persuade rather than command. The opening Allegro movement is a case in point. Rather than a dashing display piece, ‘it starts with a great sigh and ends with an even greater one’, as Peter Latham put it. The terrific main theme is counterbalanced by a more sombre little motif of repeated notes. The use of syncopation adds tension. The expansive nobility of the Adagio makes an immediate contrast. It offers fine opportunities for the kind of sweet expression for which Brahms’s friend the great violinist Joseph Joachim was noted. The scherzo is remarkable for being in duple rather than triple metre, and also for its rather anxious character. The sentimentality called for in the movement heading allows the players to indulge themselves in the harmonies. It was apparently Brahms’s friend and correspondent Elisabeth von Herzogenberg who suggested the judicious use of pizzicato. The final Presto agitato has a distinctly Gypsy-ish flavour, with syncopations emphasising its rhythmic strength. Some question-and-answer moments between the piano and violin contrast with chorale-like passages which allow the violin space in which to bloom before the tragic climax. The sonata’s official premiere was given in Budapest on 22 December 1888. The pianist was Brahms, and his partner was Jeno Hubay, a former student of Joachim who would himself teach Szigeti and d’Arányi. Programme notes © Australian Chamber Orchestra (Pärt, Sculthorpe, Brahms); Beethoven ‘Spring’ Sonata © David Garrett About the performers Jack Saltmiras About the performers Richard Tognetti Richard Tognetti violin He began his studies in his hometown of Wollongong with William Primrose, then with Alice Waten at the Sydney Conservatorium, and Igor Ozim at the Bern Conservatory, where he was awarded the Tschumi Prize as the top graduate soloist in 1989. Later that year he led several performances of the Australian Chamber Orchestra, and that November was appointed as the Orchestra’s lead violin and, subsequently, Artistic Director. He was Artistic Director of the Festival Maribor in Slovenia from 2008 to 2015. He performs on period, modern and electric instruments and his numerous arrangements, compositions and transcriptions have expanded the chamber orchestra repertoire and been performed throughout the world. As director and/or soloist, he has appeared with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Academy of Ancient Music, Hong Kong, Luxembourg and Slovenian Philharmonic orchestras, Handel and Haydn Society (Boston), Camerata Salzburg, Tapiola Sinfonietta, Irish Chamber Orchestra and the Nordic Chamber Orchestra, as well as all of the Australian symphony orchestras, most recently as soloist/director with the Melbourne and Tasmanian Symphony orchestras. He also gave the Australian premieres of Ligeti’s Violin Concerto and Lutosławski’s Partita. This is the first of five concerts he gives this season as the Barbican Centre’s first Artist-in-Residence at Milton Court Concert Hall. He was co-composer of the score for Peter Weir’s Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World; he co-composed the soundtrack to Tom Carroll’s surf film Storm Surfers 3D; and created The Red Tree, inspired by Shaun Tan’s book. He also created the documentary film Musica Surfica, as well as The Glide, The Reef and The Crowd. Richard Tognetti was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2010. He holds honorary doctorates from three Australian universities and was made a National Living Treasure in 1999. He performs on a 1743 Guarneri del Gesù violin, lent to him by an anonymous Australian benefactor. 7 Richard Tognetti is Artistic Director of the Australian Chamber Orchestra. He has established an international reputation for his compelling performances and artistic individualism. Marco Borggreve Polina Leschenko 8 Polina Leschenko piano Polina Leschenko was born in St Petersburg into a family of musicians and began playing the piano under her father’s guidance at the age of 6. Two years later she made her solo debut with the Leningrad Symphony Orchestra. She studied with Sergei Leschenko, Vitali Margulis, Pavel Gililov, Alexandre Rabinovitch-Barakovsky and Christopher Elton. At the age of 16 she received her Higher Diploma with distinction from the Royal Conservatory in Brussels. Musiktage Mondsee. She regularly collaborates with Patricia Kopatchinskaja, Alissa Margulis, Priya Mitchell, Daniel Rowland, Alexander Sitkovetsky, Ivry Gitlis, Maxim Rysanov, Mark Drobinsky, Natalie Clein, Heinrich Schiff, Torleif Thedéen and the Auryn Quartet. She has given solo recitals in Vienna’s Konzerthaus, the Amsterdam Concertgebouw and Carnegie Hall, as well as in Salzburg, Milan, London, Paris, Brussels, Minnesota and Atlanta. She works with orchestras around the world, including Camerata Salzburg, the Hallé, London Mozart Players, the Australian and Scottish Chamber orchestras, Bern and Bournemouth Symphony orchestras, Britten Sinfonia and Russian National Orchestra. She is a regular visitor to the Hallé and in 2008 performed in its 150th-birthday celebrations and toured South America under Sir Mark Elder. She is also an accomplished chamber musician and has appeared at many festivals, including Aldeburgh, Cheltenham, Risør, Stavanger, Istanbul, Progetto Martha Argerich in Lugano, Salzburg and In 2009 she took up a new position as International Chair in Piano at the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama in Cardiff, where she had a three-year residency. Polina Leschenko’s award-winning discography includes solo works by Liszt, Chopin, Kreisler/ Rachmaninov, Brahms and Bach/Feinberg; Prokofiev chamber music with Martha Argerich, Christian Poltéra and Roby Lakatos; and Glinka’s Sextet as part of the ‘Martha Argerich and Friends Live from the Lugano Festival’ series.