Download The Wooden Prince, Op. 13 - Chicago Symphony Orchestra

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
PROGRAM NOTES
by Phillip Huscher
Béla Bartók
Born March 25, 1881, Nagyszentmiklós, Transylvania (now part of Romania).
Died September 26, 1945, New York City.
The Wooden Prince, Op. 13
Bartók began his ballet The Wooden Prince, based on a scenario by Béla Balázs, in 1914 and finished
orchestrating
trating the score in 1917. The premiere was given on May 12, 1917, in Budapest. The score calls
for four flutes and two piccolos, four oboes and two english horns, four clarinets, E
E-flat
flat clarinet and bass
clarinet, four bassoons and two contrabassoons, thr
three
ee saxophones, four horns, four trumpets and two
cornets, three trombones and tuba, two harps, celesta, glockenspiel, xylophone, triangle, castanets,
cymbals, side drum, bass drum, tam
tam-tam,
tam, and strings. Performance time is approximately fifty-five
fifty
minutes.
The Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s first subscription concert performances of Bartók’s The Wooden
Prince were given at Orchestra Hall on October 22, 23, and 25, 1987, with Pierre Boulez conducting. Our
most recent subscription concert performances were giv
given
en on December 10, 11, 12, and 13, 1998, with
Pierre Boulez conducting.
At thirty-two,
two, Béla Bartók thought his career was over. His opera, Bluebeard’s Castle, had failed to win a
national competition, and there was little chance it would ever be staged. F
For
or two years he had been
unable to write anything except for some easy piano pieces. In 1914 Béla Balázs, who wrote the text for
Bluebeard’s Castle, found him “in a gloomy and hopeless state of mind. He was thinking about
emigration, or—of suicide.”
Béla Bartók is arguably the twentieth
twentieth-century’s
century’s unhappiest example of a composer who learned to live
with neglect throughout his life only to receive, after his death, public recognition as one of the great
masters of the era. The period around 1914 was perhaps the lowest point (at least from Bartók’s
perspective), but for most of his career, stretching ahead another thirty years, discouragement, the
struggle to find an audience, failing health, and chronic poverty predominated. The Wooden Prince is the
first work
rk with which Bartók’s fortunes seemed, at least temporarily, to change.
The project was designed to lift the composer’s spirits. After their work together on Bluebeard’s Castle,
Balázs suggested that he and Bartók collaborate on a musical pantomime based on his play The Wooden
Prince.. Composition began in 1914; it was the first serious work Bartók had tried in many months.
Progress was fitful and stubborn, but Bartók pushed on, inspired, no doubt, by the promise of a staged
production. He can’t have guessed
ed that this musical fairy tale would mark the turning point in his career. It
may well have been that the pantomime’s subtext, filled with pertinent points about the fate of the creative
artist, also spurred him on.
The main characters are a Prince and a Princess, who, in classic storybook fashion, lives in the castle
next door. Their fates are governed by a Fairy. The central character, however, is the toy puppet the
Prince makes of wood, which subsequently captivates the Princess, leaving the Prince alone
al
and
abandoned. Balázs later said that the wooden puppet symbolizes
the creative work of the artist, who puts all of himself into his work until he has made
something complete, shining, and perfect. The artist himself, however, is left ro
robbed
bbed and
poor. I was thinking of that common and profound tragedy when the creation becomes
the rival of the creator, and of the pain and glory of the situation in which a woman prefers
the poem to the poet, the picture to the painter.
At the premiere on May 12, 1917, The Wooden Prince was an enormous popular success, and Bartók
received one of the few ovations of his life. At first he didn’t feel that the glory was more for the picture
than the painter—in fact, if we are to judge from Balázs’s snippy comments, Bartók was practically
lionized. (“The next day the papers gave Bartók full recognition,” he wrote, “but me mostly abuse.”) The
popularity of The Wooden Prince paved the way for the delayed premiere of Bluebeard’s Castle the
following year, restored Bartók’s will to compose, established his name with the Hungarian public, and
perhaps even encouraged him to believe that audiences would follow the progress of his art in the years
ahead. Initially this optimism wasn’t misguided. Bartók began to write with a new urgency and a fiercely
concentrated energy; years of neglect turned to a time of success. His music was published by the
prestigious Universal Editions, and he began to tour Europe and later America.
But the turn of fortune was temporary. The Wooden Prince disappeared from the repertory when Balázs
became a political exile and the government forbade performances of his works. Revivals of both The
Wooden Prince and Bluebeard’s Castle were planned to honor Bartók’s fiftieth birthday in 1931, but
Bartók refused to have Balázs’s name taken off the programs and the performances were canceled. The
Wooden Prince was presented again in Budapest in 1935, though this time success was less spectacular.
By then Bartók was deeply caught up in the politics of the time, and already sensed that he might have to
leave his homeland. He did, finally, in 1940, emmigrating to the United States. The story of his sad last
years in this country has nothing to do with The Wooden Prince, except that it finds Bartók himself left
robbed and poor, to use Balázs’s words, despite the lasting significance of his creative life.
Although The Wooden Prince has never held the stage as a ballet, it contains much inventive music and
brilliant writing for orchestra. The work reveals a number of powerful influences on Bartók’s maturing
style—the impact of Strauss’s incandescent orchestral works (Bartók was stunned when he first heard
Also sprach Zarathustra in 1902); the careful study of Debussy’s scores, at Kodály’s suggestion; and the
discovery of folk music, which had given him a second career as a pioneer ethnomusicologist. (He also
may have been inspired, or perhaps merely provoked, by the Budapest premieres, in 1913, of
Stravinsky’s two new ballets, The Firebird and Petrushka.)
The Wooden Prince also reveals the crystallization of Bartók’s working methods. The overall shape,
taking its cue from that of the story itself, is an arch form, with the second half mirroring the first. The
palindrome—a shape that reverses itself at its midpoint—became the most characteristic structure for
Bartók, governing not only entire works, but movements and sections, and even individual themes. Bartók
carefully uses music to distinguish characters, so that even in a concert performance there’s a sense of
the action. The Prince and the Princess are given folklike themes; she appears at first accompanied by a
gentle clarinet melody, he by a march in the lower strings. Nature is painted in lush, colorful, highly
impressionistic tones. The wooden puppet dances to harsh, artificial, even grotesque sounds.
The music is continuous, although Bartók indicated in his score a division into seven sections framed by a
prelude and a postlude. At the center, as the keystone of the arch, is the decisive dance between the
Princess and the Wooden Prince. The score begins in the depths of C major, and the whole prelude is
essentially one long-breathed crescendo on a C major triad—colored by a persistent F-sharp—much as
Wagner’s Das Rheingold begins with a great, sustained E-flat chord.
Three dances build toward the central dance with the puppet. The first is the dance of the Princess in the
forest (the clarinet melody leads the way). Next comes the dance of the trees, marked by rustling scales
and tremolos, an eerie whistling in the strings, and the sounds of birds in the winds. The following dance
of the waves, when the Fairy brings the stream to life, is painted in a burst of activity from the winds,
harps, and celesta four-hands, and the saxophones sing a long melody. The dance with the Wooden
Prince is the longest portion of the score, and the music grows in scope and abandon. After the climax,
the music gradually retreats as the drama unwinds. The downward slope of the ballet is a sequence of
episodes, including the seductive dance of the Princess trying in vain to win back the Prince, and the
rising of the forest to bar her way. The postlude restores C major and the peaceful harmony of nature.
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.