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BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Seiji Ozawa, Music Director Bernard Haitink, Principal Guest Conductor One Hundred and Sixteenth Season, 1996-97 SUPPER CONCERT VI Thursday, February 6, at 6 Saturday, February 8, at 6 VALERIA VILKER KUCHMENT, violin AMNON LEVY, violin MICHAEL ZARETSKY, viola JOEL MOERSCHEL, cello STEPHEN DRURY, piano SCHUMAN String Quartet I. II. III. Ms. Sinfonia (Vigoroso) Passacaglia (Adagio) Fugue (Allegro moderato) VILKER KUCHMENT, Messrs. COPLAND Mr. LEVY, ZARETSKY and MOERSCHEL Vitebsk, for piano Messrs. LEVY, GERSHWIN No. 2 trio MOERSCHEL, and DRURY Lullaby, for string quartet Mr. LEVY, Ms. Messrs. VILKER KUCHMENT, ZARETSKY and MOERSCHEL Baldwin piano Please exit to your left for supper following the concert. Week 15 Mi I William Schuman String Quartet No. 2 The list of William Schuman's work in Bruce Savior's article about the composer for The New Grove Dictionary of American Music includes five string quartets and ten symphonies. These abstract musical genres are the heart of his output, his most fundamental response to the creative impulse. But Schuman was a late starter as a symphonist; though he studied the violin as a young man, his first compositions were in the style of the popular songs of the '20s and '30s, an area in which he was almost completely self-taught. When he discovered symphonic music almost by accident at nineteen, he determined that it was the musical world he wished to inhabit and began to take some private lessons in harmony and counterpoint. The premiere of Roy Harris's Symphony 1933 by Serge Koussevitzky and the BSO in January 1934 opened the path to the kind of music Schuman wished to write; indeed that was the year in which he finally gave up the composition of popular songs. It is often said that Schuman studied with Harris, but the lessons were never so formal as a course in composition. William Schuman told me in 1980 that they were essentially more-or-less regular conversations during the summer of 1936 centered around music that he was then writing, with helpful observations and hints from the slightly older and more experienced composer. During these learning years from 1932 to 1937 Schuman created four orchestral works two small pieces and his first two symphonies and two string quartets; these early works were later withdrawn by the composer and can no longer be heard. All, that is, except the String Quartet No. 2, which can thus be regarded as the first work of his early maturity. Certainly there can be little question that Schuman's String Quartet No. 2 comes from the same wellsprings as the magnificent Symphony No. 3 of four years later. Simply on the surface one can see that the idiosyncratic use of Baroque genres (here Sinfonia, Passacaglia, and Fugue) turned to vigorous and vivid modern use anticipates a similar approach in the Third Symphony. More profound is the composer's interest in the long line, the careful preparation of climax and dramatic effect through the operation of contrapuntal techniques. From the beginning of the opening Sinfonia, there is a tautness to the four lines of the quartet, a feeling of energetic competition between one part and another, that was to remain characteristic of Schuman's music throughout his career. The muscular opening theme yields to a more songful solo utterance with a pizzicato accompaniment. — — — — The Passacaglia functions as the slow movement of the three and is also the longest and darkest. (A passacaglia is a special type of theme-and-variations in which the "theme" is usually a bass line repeated over and over again this is called "ostinato," the Italian word for "obstinate" while newer melodies continually unfold on — top of it.) It — opens in a stark unison presentation of the ostinato theme, nine individ- Over the course of the numerous variations, the countermelodies are for and gently lilting. In the end, the music dies gently away. The final Fugue opens with three brusque, attention-getting chords, then a fidgety nervous passage that prepares the listener for the fugue proper. The brusque chords recur to close the introduction, and the fugal exposition begins, a fast-moving melody that does ual pitches. the most part subdued not sound as if designed for contrapuntal use, not obviously "fugal" —but so it proves to But this is no academic exercise. The intersecting lines build to dramatic moments where occasionally the brusque chords punctuate the flow and set it off in a new direction. Here already Schuman has turned the formality of the fugue into a very personal be. musical medium such as he was later to use for the climax of his Third Symphony. Aaron Copland Vitebsk Copland's first work to employ a folk melody was inspired by hearing a Jewish folk tune in a performance of The Dybbuk, a well-known Yiddish drama by S. Ansky. He was fascinated by the tune and decided to use it as the basis of a composition. Upon learning that Ansky had first heard the tune in the Russian village of Vitebsk, he decided to use the geographical reference as his title. In the intervening years, Vitebsk has changed character, and Copland recalled in his autobiography Copland to 1942, "Years later when I traveled to the Soviet Union, the Russians were amazed any composer would name a piece of music after the city of Vitebsk, a large complex resembling Pittsburgh or Cleveland !" He completed the work at the MacDowell Colony in September 1928. It was first performed in New York's Town Hall on February 16, 1929, by pianist Walter Gieseking and two members of that industrial the Pro Arte Quartet. The work is in a single movement of rhapsodic character divided into three sections: The opening harshly juxtaposes simultaneous major and minor triads combination seemed to Copland to imply a pitch somewhere in between the major third and the minor third: in other words, quarter-tones, which appear in the violin and cello, emphasizing the Hebraic atmosphere of the piece. They set the scene for the folk tune, played by the cello. The tempo changes to an Allegro vivace for a section that to the composer displays a "Chagall-like grotesquerie." The unrelenting scherzo is filled with offbeat rhythms and inklings of the folk tune's opening notes. At the return to the opening tempo, Grave, the theme reappears in violin and cello, with the piano again commenting in harsh major/minor chords. The coda resolves the tensions thus established in a solemn hush. slow-fast-slow. in the piano. This George Gershwin Lullaby, for string quartet George Gershwin came out of Tin Pan Alley and made his first income in music as a "song plugger," tirelessly sitting at a piano in a publisher's music shop, demonstrating the latest hit songs to customers who might be persuaded to buy the sheet music themselves. Gradually he had an opportunity to demonstrate some of his own tunes and soon was contributing songs to reviews, then writing the scores of entire shows. But he also aspired to serious musical respectability. Even after becoming wealthy and successful, he continued to study music with the best teachers he could find, even undertaking extensive work in orchestration (with which few Broadway composers would trouble themselves, since there was never time for the composer to orchestrate a show anyway). In addition to his Broadway shows, Gershwin wanted to write for the concert hall and opera house, so he also undertook work in many of the standard "classical" genres. His Lullaby for string quartet, composed about 1919 or 1920, is one of the earliest examples of this aspiradetermination to learn part-writing and scoring for a standard classical a far more delicate work than the bouncy show tunes he was writing at the same time, but that probably reflects his own understanding of the dichotomy between popular and classical. In any case, he still imbues his Lullaby with a subtle touch of syncopation. tion, of his ensemble. It is — Notes by Steven Ledbetter Kuchment graduated from the Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow; became a faculty member at the Tchaikovsky ConservaA prizewinner in a number of international violin and chamber music com- Valeria Vilker upon finishing her studies she tory College. and in chamber music. In the Boston area she has been concertmaster of SinfoNova, the Harvard Chamber Orchestra, the Handel and Haydn Society, and the Boston Philharmonic. Ms. Vilker Kuchment joined the BSO petitions, at the she has appeared as recitalist, beginning of the 1986-87 season. soloist A faculty member at the New England Conser- vatory of Music, the Longy School of Music in Cambridge, the Tanglewood Music Center, and the Boston University Tanglewood Institute, she has recorded for Melodiya and Sine Qua Non. BSO first violinist Amnon After hearing Levy's musical career began in Tel Aviv, where he him play, Jascha Heifetz urged Mr. Levy's teachers to send him was born. to the United States for advanced studies; there he attended the Juilliard School of Music in New York and the Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where he studied with Ivan Galamian. After graduating from Curtis he participated in the Marlboro Music Festival, where he performed chamber music with Rudolf Serkin. A BSO member since 1964, Mr. Levy has performed with orchestras and given solo recitals throughout the United States and in Mexico City. He has recently undertaken a conducting career as well, making his conducting debut at Jordan Hall in February 1988 with the Longwood Symphony Orchestra. Born in the Soviet Union, Central Music School in violist Michael Zaretsky studied originally as a violinist at the Moscow and at the Music College of the Moscow State Conserva- where he then continued his education as a violist. In 1972 Mr. Zaretsky immigrated where he became principal violist of the Jerusalem Broadcasting Symphony Orchestra and a soloist of Israeli Radio. In 1973 he auditioned for Leonard Bernstein, who helped him obtain an immigration visa to the United States and brought him to Tanglewood. There, while a Fellow of the Tanglewood Music Center, he successfully auditioned for the BSO, which he joined that fall. An established soloist and chamber musician, Mr. Zaretsky teaches at the Boston University School of Music and the Longy School of Music. tory, to Israel, Born and raised in Oak Park, Illinois, Joel Moerschel received his early musical training from Chicago Symphony cellist Nicolai Zedeler and from Karl Fruh at the Chicago Musical College. Advanced studies with Ronald Leonard at the Eastman School of Music earned him a bachelor of music degree and a performer's certificate. A member of the Boston Symphony since 1970, Mr. Moerschel has also been an active member of Boston's musical community, exploring chamber music with groups such as the Wheaton Trio and Francesco String Quartet, and contemporary music with Boston Musica Viva and Collage New Music. Stephen Drury has appeared as soloist with orchestras from San Diego to Bucharest and in music festivals on both sides of the Atlantic. prizewinner in several Pianist A and Carnegie Hall/Rockefeller competitions, his repertoire stretches from Bach, Mozart, and Liszt to the music of today. He has directed the world premiere of George Russell's Time Line for orchestra, chorus, jazz band, and soloists; premiered the solo part of John Cage's 1 Ol with the BSO; and gave the first performance of John Zorn's Aporias with Dennis Russell Davies and the Cologne Radio Symphony. Mr. Drury has commissioned new works from John Cage, John Zorn, Terry Riley, Lee Hyla, and Chinary Ung. His recordings include music by Elliott Carter, Frederic Rzewski, John Cage, and Colin McPhee. competitions, including the Concert Artists Guild, Affiliate Artists,