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Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) Romeo and Juliet: Fantasy Overture 19’00 Tchaikovsky’s talent and inclination for music were obvious from an early age. However, during his childhood, there was little available public music education in Russia. His first formal lessons in both piano and voice started at 15, rather late for someone destined to be one of music history’s renowned composers. Instead, with the completion of a most traditional boarding school education, he appeared destined for a more ordinary life than that of a famous composer. By age 19 he began work as a civil servant for the Ministry of Justice in St. Petersburg. However, with the formation of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, he enrolled and began to follow his true destiny. By his graduation in 1865, he had stopped all civil employment and was fully committed to the often uncertain lifestyle of a composer. The formal Westernoriented music teaching he received contrasted greatly with the nationalist movement set by the composers of the Russian Five (Cui, Borodin, RimskyKorsakov, Mussorgsky, and Balakirev). Tchaikovsky independently pressed forward in spite of a mixed relationship with the group. His training determined him to take a path to merge his musical education with the indigenous musical styles he was familiar with from childhood. Through this grueling process emerged a most personal but characteristically Russian style. Tchaikovsky’s Romeo and Juliet: Fantasy Overture, unquestionably one of his finest and most carefully hewn scores, was his initial orchestral success. Tales of doomed love always resonated deeply with Tchaikovsky and Shakespeare’s tragedy Romeo and Juliet was no exception. In 1869, at Mily Balakirev’s suggestion, Tchaikovsky took up the play as a musical subject. At this time he was enamoured of a young cousin of one of his students, Eduard Zak. Four years later after Zak committed suicide, Tchaikovsky pondered the incident in his diary stating: “the death of this boy, the fact that he no longer exists, is beyond my understanding. It seems to me that I have never loved anyone so strongly as him.” For Tchaikovsky, the stage was set for a most personal and emotional meeting on the creative fields of tragedy and triumph. Rather than attempting to retell complete details of the entire story of Shakespeare’s “two star-crossed lovers”, as Berlioz, Bellini, and Gounod had done earlier, Tchaikovsky brilliantly concentrated his attention on the characters of Romeo and Juliet, and included only those elements of the play – Friar Lawrence, the Montague-Capulet feud, and the power of fate – that had a direct and elemental impact upon their destiny. Relying on the central strands of Shakespeare’s tragedy, he renders Shakespeare’s narrative down to its essentials in this 19-minute, tightly knit, sumptuously orchestrated tone poem that is undeniably dramatic and yearningly beautiful. Painstakingly revised three times over a 10-year period, the work was disfavoured following the initial performances and publication. Panned in both Vienna and Paris and slammed by the renowned music critic Eduard Hanslick, the Fantasy Overture went through several versions before it arrived in its final form. Not until Tchaikovsky cast off Balakirev’s heavy influence and returned the work to a polished version of its original form did it come into both critical and public favour. The result is clearly audible in today’s version, a version that is strikingly different from the composer’s original concept of the piece. Most importantly, a work of distinction both for its inspiration and technical brilliance. Embracing the three main strands of the Shakespeare story, the Fantasy Overture presents a symphonic poem in sonata form, inclusive of an introduction and epilogue. The music begins with a lengthy preamble before presenting its two principal theme groups, the first being some oppressively savage music representing the conflict between the Capulets and the Montagues, and the latter being an ecstatic love theme for Romeo and Juliet. The second statement of this theme is interrupted by the music for the warring families as Romeo and Juliet’s love is crushed by the intense hatred the two families share for each other. After a solemn variation of the love theme in the minor mode, the theme is transfigured into music that is serene and chorale-like, ending the piece on a triumphant, if not somewhat desolate and otherworldly note. The tragic coda sums the tale up and aptly conveys to us the unhappy, anguished fate of the “star-crossed lovers”. Edvard Grieg (1843-1907) Piano Concerto in A minor, Op. 16 30’00 Grieg returned to his native Norway in 1866 following an eight-year period that included formal music study in Germany and artistically productive pursuits in Copenhagen. Having outgrown what he viewed as change-adverse and stodgy Germanic teaching, he felt Copenhagen was a cultural oasis where the best artistic forces of Europe and Scandinavia converged. There he found an inspiring teacher in the composer Niels Gade of whom Mendelssohn was a passionate advocate of his symphonies. It was Gade that encouraged Grieg to compose with a distinctly nationalistic voice while embracing the cultural furor of musical romanticism that was overtaking Europe in the late nineteenth century. Inspired and independent, Grieg’s return to the country of his birth inaugurated a four-decade career of prolific composition, concert tours and teaching at the Norwegian Academy of Music. He loved the folk dances and traditions of the countryside, elements that permeate his compositions. Grieg wrote innumerable piano miniatures and songs, several incidental scores for theatrical productions (Ibsen and Bjornson were friends and frequent collaborators), orchestral works, chamber music and his most ambitious and singular concerto, the Piano Concerto in A minor. On April 3, 1869, Grieg’s Piano Concerto was premiered in Copenhagen to tremendous success by the Norwegian pianist Edmund Neupert. Grieg naturally had intentions of performing the initial performance, but due to prior musical obligations, he was absent. Neupert, his good friend, wrote to Grieg an account of the event stating, “On Saturday your divine concerto resounded in the great hall of the Casino. The triumph I achieved was tremendous. Even as early as the cadenza in the first movement the public broke into a real storm.” Subsequently, Liszt became a great fan of the concerto, remarking that the young Grieg had the makings of a great composer. Many scholars have noted the similarities of the piece to Schumann’s Piano Concerto in A minor. Both share the same key, and both begin with a dramatic opening orchestral chord immediately followed by fiery, virtuosic keyboard flourishes from the soloist. These resemblances are not a coincidence. As a student at the Leipzig Conservatory, Grieg heard Clara Schumann perform her husband’s concerto. Grieg described this event as one of the highlights of his stay in Leipzig – and he developed a deep admiration for the older composer‘s music. Often we perceive smatterings of Mendelssohn, Chopin, and even Liszt on occasion. All were composers that Grieg had a deep respect for. Hans von Bulow even hailed him as “The Chopin of the North”. However, Grieg was no mere imitator. He built on the stylistic tradition of the German Romantic School, and integrated elements of Norwegian folk music. These features imbue his music with a deep originality that distinguishes Grieg‘s uniqueness in classical music. It is entirely appropriate that Grieg’s most popular orchestral work is a piano concerto, for the piano was central to all his compositional output. It is noteworthy that Grieg did not produce large numbers of large-scale works, preferring to work in the medium of small scale piano and voice works. This makes the appearance of the piano concerto in his output even more remarkable, particularly as it appeared so early on in his oeuvre. Cast in the traditional three-movement design the Piano Concerto is a superb example of the Romantic era concerto. Typical of a Romantic piano concerto is the relationship of the pianist to the orchestra which is more protagonistic in nature. The Grieg Piano Concerto falls into this category, as the piano emerges immediately and assertively as the champion of the moment. This psychological and rhetorical dynamic holds throughout the movement culminating in the fiery and effusive cadenza. Conceived in sonata form, the first movement displays characteristic folk theme material displayed with a convincing interplay between the piano and orchestra. In cyclic style, the Allegro ends with the same protagonist’s opening statement giving us a full sense of completion, almost as if nothing further is required. A complete work all within the first movement. The second movement, seemingly a quasi-intermezzo, appears in perfect balance, soft and pastoral with the piano part having expressively improvisational underpinnings. Exquisitely calm and lyrical, it is laced with moments of sheer magical wonderment. Uncomplicated in structure it begins contemplatively, the orchestra in muted strings over which the piano rhapsodises. Throughout the movement, a series of delicate trills signal the entrance of the piano, until a dramatically transformed and angular version of the main theme shatters the placid mood. Eventually, the serenity of the beginning of the movement returns and leads to a quiet, dreamy ending that lapses without pause into the stellar third movement. The finale is essentially in two parts, the first being a generous segment of a dressed up Norwegian athletic dance known as “halling”. Sound effects taken from the unique, violin-like characteristics of a Norwegian folk instrument known as the Hardanger Fiddle enhance the folk dance musical landscape. The movement’s second subject is quicker, more deft and elaborate, but no less folk-like. After a tranquil episode introduced by the solo flute, the main theme returns for extended and impassioned pianistic development. The piano soloist performs a brief cadenza, the music transforms from minor to major, and yet another folk dance theme furthers the pace. The concerto concludes with a brilliant, virtuostic Lisztian-styled cadenza, taking us to the triumphant ending based on the earlier solo flute melody, now transmuted into the major key. It is a flash of majesty to match the magnificence of Grieg's native Norwegian landscape. Jean Sibelius (1865-1957) Symphony No. 3 in C major, Op. 52 29’00 Sibelius is widely recognised as Finland‘s greatest composer. Through his music, he is credited with having helped Finland to develop a national identity during its struggle for independence from Russia. Sibelius, while keenly focused early on in developing a career as a concert violinist, was largely self-taught as a composer until he began his studies at the Helsinki Music Institute, now the Sibelius Academy. Once engaged in formal study, the self-taught Sibelius became highly influenced by his composition teacher Martin Wegelius. Another of his teachers having significant influence was the renowned pianist/composer, Ferruccio Busoni, with whom he enjoyed a lifelong friendship. Having graduated from the Helsinki Institute, Sibelius continued his studies in a less formal but perhaps more impactful manner both in Berlin and in Vienna around 1890. Attending concerts and operas, socializing within music circles as well as composing widened his musical experiences and tastes. While in Vienna, he became particularly interested in the music of Bruckner whom he regarded as “the greatest living composer”. Shortly after returning to Helsinki, Sibelius thoroughly enjoyed conducting two of his new works, the Karelia Overture and the Scène de Ballet at a popular concert. Having developed an interest in all things Finnish, he was also able to continue working on Kullervo, Op. 7. Kullervo premiered in Helsinki on 28 April 1892 and proved to be an enormous success. Central to Sibelius’ compositional output is his set of seven numbered symphonies. While he is widely known for these and his tone poems, especially Finlandia and the Karelia Suite, the symphonies beautifully display his stylistic evolution. As for his musical style, hints of Tchaikovsky‘s music are particularly evident in the early works such as his First Symphony and the Violin Concerto. For a period, he was nevertheless overwhelmed by Wagner, particularly while composing his opera. More lasting influences included Busoni and Bruckner. The similarities to Bruckner can be observed in the use of brass instruments in his orchestral works as well as the generally slower tempi in his music. From Busoni, he developed and asserted the importance of musical form and structure. Notorious for endlessly reworking his scores, Sibelius compared his compositional practice to the search for the proper reconfiguration of scattered mosaic tiles flung down from heaven. Particularly in his later works, he laboured under merciless self-criticism, battling to balance competing compositional and philosophical ideals. According to him, “a ‘natural’ symphony should be more like a river that gets its water from the smaller brooks”. However difficult the creative process proved, Sibelius’ Third Symphony is all about the pleasure of making music. Certain pieces by Beethoven fall into this category in that while containing some of the most neutral materials, they are crafted into startling, often dramatically impactful works beneath the strong layer of compositional craftsmanship. Beethoven’s Triple Concerto comes to mind as one not so popular model, and his Emperor Concerto being a most popular example. Sibelius’ Third Symphony is part of this tradition. Its chief traits are modesty and energy. The orchestration, for 1907, is rather reticent, at its best achieving a very basic and most “classical” sonority. Formally speaking, Sibelius progressively stripped away the traditional icons of sonata form and, instead of multiple themes that contrast, he created cells and/or fragments that evolve and subsequently climax to a formidable statement. His subsequent works are remarkable for their sense of unbroken development, progressing by means of thematic permutations and derivations. The Third Symphony is an amiable, triumphal, and deceptively simple-sounding piece. Themes from Finnish folk music in the work‘s early chords contribute to both its simplicity and likeability. Composed just after his major lifestyle change and relocation to the countryside near Helsinki, it contrasts sharply with the Romanticism of the first two symphonies and impresses us with the clarity of its expression. This elemental and distinctively original sound permeated his forthcoming compositions giving us music that matches the stark beauty of the Nordic landscape he lived amidst. It is fitting that Sibelius’s first major work from the countryside opens with a broad, pastoral statement, establishing the home key of C complete with resonant drones. The tightly constructed first movement wastes no time transitioning to the secondary theme, a melancholy minor-key tune introduced by the cellos. In the Classical era spirit of Haydn and Beethoven, Sibelius’ small ideas such as running string figures become essential building blocks that develop and transform the music while retaining their recognisable imprints. The movement is in sonata form, which, in indecisive broad strokes, includes the exposition (subjects/themes introduced), development (ample altercation and experimentation with the exposition’s subjects), and recapitulation (subjects restated). The slow second movement shifts to the remote key of G-sharp minor, exotic sounding in comparison to the purity of C major. The music seemingly harkens to centuries past with woodwind duets, modal harmonies, and lutelike plucked accompaniments. It is hewn in three large sections, the third of which recaps the first so that the structure is an A B A form. In Sibelius‘ classical symphonic style, one can only become absorbed in the musical events themselves as there is no imagery or jarringly dramatic moments. As with Haydn one is simply compelled to sit back and listen. The third movement returns from previously distant tonality with Beethovenian efficiency, pivoting back to the home key through a single pitch spread across the orchestra. The finale that ensues is an unusual hybrid, settling first into an elfin scherzo that builds to a fortissimo climax. Then, with an elegant subtlety, it morphs to a sturdy four-beat tempo, with the violas and cellos intoning a humble chorale that grows into a roiling sendoff. The structure of the final movement of Sibelius’ Third Symphony is adventurous, combining a scherzolike first half with a broad, chorale-style second half. Sibelius once described the movement as “the crystallization of ideas from chaos”. Restless in nature, the tempo constantly changes, sometimes abruptly, sometimes gradually. Seemingly there are times Sibelius can hardly crowd as many notes as he would like into each measure; at others, he will take the time to stand still on a single note, or a pair, or a trill, or an intricately figured chord. Fragments whisk by, some so fast we can hardly catch them including bits of the first two movements. Seemingly shadow becomes substance. This is fantastic music. It is firm and lithe without becoming arrogant or superior. It embraces a generosity of spirit and a wonderful expansiveness that is the mature Sibelius, one that returns in future symphonies. Programme notes by Allan Fuller