Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Program Notes for March 9, 2014 By Ellen Schmidt Symphony No. 7 “Le Midi” Franz Joseph Haydn 1732-1809 Haydn was born in the small Austrian village of Rohrau. His musical gifts were apparent when he was quite young, but the opportunities to develop them in Rohrau were virtually non-existent, so at the age of five he was sent to live in the town of Hainburg, twelve miles away, with Johann Matthias Frankh, a relative who was the schoolmaster and choirmaster there. He sang in the choir and learned to play the harpsichord and violin. At the age of eight, he was recruited to join the choir of the prestigious St. Stephen’s Cathedral in Vienna, where he was exposed to much of the best music of the time. It was only after he left St. Stephen’s nine years later that he began to study composition with Italian composer and voice teacher Nicola Porpora, while he served as Porpora’s accompanist and valet. In 1761 he was hired as Kapellmeister, or music director, by Prince Anton Esterhazy, a position he held for the next 29 years. The Symphony No. 7, named by Haydn himself Le Midi (Afternoon), was the second of three symphonies following the course of the day which he composed shortly after he began his service with the Esterhazys. Exactly how Haydn saw the work as expressing “afternoon” is unclear. It is reminiscent of the Baroque concerto grosso, with two violins and a cello as soloists. The work opens with a stately introduction in the style of the French overture, with its dotted rhythms and slow tempo. Bustling strings then burst in with the principal theme. A brief second subject is heard in the solo cello. Movement two, marked Adagio, has a recitative-like introduction. There is a cadenza by the violin and cello before the orchestra brings the movement to its close. The third movement is a lilting minuet with a more lyric trio in which the French horn has a prominent role. The lively fourth movement, in sonata allegro form, adds the flute to the solo instruments. Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Op. 21 Frederic Chopin (1810-1849) Chopin’s father was a Frenchman who immigrated to Poland and made his living teaching French; his mother was Polish. Frederic was a child prodigy – by the age of eight he was performing in public and composing polonaises, mazurkas, and waltzes for the piano. Though he moved to Paris when he was twenty and never returned to Poland, his love of his native country never left him and the flavor of its songs and dances can be heard in many of his works. Following his death from tuberculosis at the age of 39, his body was buried in Paris, but his heart was taken to Warsaw, where it remains in a shrine in the Church of the Holy Cross. Chopin’s composition teacher recognized his genius and encouraged him to compose symphonies and operas, but Chopin decided at a young age to write only for the instrument he loved, the piano. Music historian Harold Schonberg writes that “As a pianist he created a style that dominated the entire second half of the nineteenth century…For the first time the piano became a total instrument, a singing instrument, an instrument of infinite color, poetry, and nuance, a heroic instrument, an intimate instrument…As a composer, Chopin has survived all changes of fashion and is as popular today as he ever was. Almost everything he composed is in the active repertoire.” Although the Piano Concerto in F minor is designated Chopin’s second concerto, it actually was composed earlier than the first. It was published second because during his extended journey from Warsaw to Paris in 1830-31, the orchestral parts were lost and had to be written out again. Chopin found this task very tedious, and the concerto was not published until 1836, despite being premiered in Warsaw on March 17, 1830, when he was barely 20 years old. So many people had been turned away from that concert that a second performance was given just two days later. Chopin’s orchestration was considered by some later composers to be inadequate, with the orchestra serving as just a background rather than being in dialogue with the piano. Several of them actually reorchestrated it, but their attempts were unsuccessful, and today we hear the concerto as Chopin wrote it. The first movement, marked Maestoso, is in sonata allegro form, and it has a double exposition. The orchestra first presents both the vigorous first theme (in the strings) and the songlike second theme (introduced by the oboe) before the piano enters and presents both themes again, although in a more elaborate fashion. Only the first theme is expanded upon in the development section. However, after the orchestra brings in the recapitulation, the first theme is played only briefly while the second is extended. Movement two is marked Larghetto and is in ternary form. A soulful nocturne is followed by a more passionate middle section played over tremolo strings, and then the nocturne returns and the movement closes in a wistful, dreamy fashion. Chopin told a friend that this movement was inspired by his unrequited love for a young soprano and fellow student. The concluding movement is marked Allegro Vivace and draws upon Polish folk dance rhythms. Masques and Bergamasques, Suite for Orchestra, Op. 112 Gabriel Faure (1845-1924) Faure was born in Pamiers, a small town in the south of France, where his father was a school headmaster. As a child he learned to play the harmonium, a small organ, in the school’s chapel. In 1853, an official of the National Assembly heard the boy play and encouraged his father to enroll him in the Niedermeyer School of Classical and Religious Music in Paris, 500 miles away! Faure stayed at the school for eleven years, graduating at twenty and receiving prizes in piano, organ, harmony, and composition. He was greatly influenced by Camille Saint-Saens, a teacher at the school who became a lifelong friend. Early in his career Faure made his living as a church organist and piano teacher, composing when he found time. In 1896 he was appointed professor of composition at the Paris Conservatory, and he spent his summers in the country composing. Among his students at the Conservatory were Maurice Ravel, George Enescu, and Nadia Boulanger. Musicologist Henri Prunieres writes that “What Faure developed among his pupils was taste, harmonic sensibility, and the love of pure lines, of unexpected and colorful modulations; but he never gave them recipes for composing according to his style, and that is why they all sought and found their own paths in many different, and often opposed, directions.” He was a founding member of the Societe Nationale de Musique, which had been established in 1871 to promote new French music. Other members included Saint-Saens, Cesar Franck, Edouard Lalo, and Jules Massenet. Many of Faure’s works were premiered at the Societe’s concerts. He became director of the Conservatory in 1905 and held that position until he retired in 1920. In his last years he was recognized as the leading French composer of his time. Annotator Max Derrickson writes that “there are few composers how can match the sheer loveliness of Faure’s music. Whether he was writing a melancholic or a sprightly piece, beauty for Faure was always paramount – his compositions nearly always achieved a perfect balance between melody and harmony, with a remarkable beauty….Masques and Bergamasques, written near the end of his long career, illustrates this wonderfully.” Masques and Bergamasques was composed in 1919 for King Albert I of Monaco, who had requested a one-act divertissement, a danced and sung entertainment, for the Monte Carlo Theater, to be composed by Faure in collaboration with librettist Rene Fauchois. Faure biographer Jessica Duchen writes that the work is best described as a lyric comedy set in the 18th century. The title was taken from a poem by French poet Paul Verlaine and refers to the masks of classic Italian comedy characters and an old Italian dance from the town of Bergamo. The program for the premiere stated that “The comic characters Harlequin, Gilles, and Colombine, whose task is usually to amuse the aristocratic audience, take their turn at being spectators at a masked ball on the island of Cythera. The lords and ladies, who as a rule applaud their efforts, now unwittingly provide them with entertainment by their coquettish behavior.” The Suite for Orchestra consists of four orchestral numbers taken from the stage work. It opens with an overture, marked Allegro molto vivo, with a syncopated first theme and a more lyric second theme. The second movement, in ¾ time, is a stately minuet with a fanfare-like trio. Movement three is a sprightly gavotte, a dance in duple meter. Its first theme is rather boisterous, while the second is more genteel. The work closes with a gentle pastorale in which an echo of the syncopated theme from the overture heard.