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Les Violons du Roy with Alexandre Tharaud Friday, April 15, 2016 NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Overture to Olympie J. M. Kraus (1756-1792) Joseph Martin Kraus was a composer in the Classical Era who was born on June 20, 1756 in Miltenberg am Main, Germany. He moved to Sweden at age 21, and died on December 15, 1792 at the age of 36 in Stockholm. He has been referred to as "the Swedish Mozart”, and had a life span, which was very similar to that of Mozart. King Gustav III of Sweden had a deep love for the fine arts; this quickly became known throughout the rest of Europe and attracted musicians from many countries. It took Kraus three bitter years, often spent in extreme poverty, before the king noticed him. Gustav III himself drafted the opera libretto Proserpina, which the poet Johan Henric Kellgren versified. Kraus’s music to this libretto was successfully premiered at Ulriksdal Palace on June 6, 1781, before the king and the royal household. Kraus was appointed vice-Kapellmeister of the Royal Swedish Opera and director of the Royal Academy of Music. This breakthrough meant a tremendous amount to Kraus and after receiving the news, he wrote back to his parents: "Immediately after the music ended, the king talked to me for more than a quarter of an hour...it had simply given him so much satisfaction. Yesterday I was engaged by him. Of course I was not granted any great title, but quite simple that of Kapellmeister. What is worth much more to me than 600 guilders is the favour I have been granted, which is that I am to undertake a journey to Germany, France and Italy at the King's expense.” The King was also a great admirer of the French Enlightenment and especially Voltaire, whose tragedy Olympie (1763) was adapted for the Swedish stage by the eminent writer Johan Henrik Kellgren. The Olympie of the play is the daughter of Alexander the Great, with whom two kings, fighting over the deceased Alexander’s legacy, are in love. Kraus supplied seven pieces of incidental music for the play, of which the first is the present overture in D minor. The overture is a splendid example of the so-called ‟Sturm und Drang” (‟storm and stress”) style in 18th-century music, characterized by frequent dramatic syncopations and a melodic writing that expresses great emotional turmoil, underscored by the D minor tonality. It opens with a slow introduction that returns at the end, following an agitated Allegro. Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-flat Major, K 271 “Jeunehomme" W.A. Mozart (1756-1791) The period between October 1773 and January 1777 marked Mozart’s musical coming-of-age. He was no longer on the road, traveling with his father and sister from one European capital to the next to astonish audiences as a child virtuoso. By this time, he had settled back in his hometown of Salzburg, and devoted himself to composing and performing in his capacity as Concertmaster to the Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg. It's one thing to begin writing music at the age of 5, as Mozart did; it’s another thing to compose a full-length piano concerto the month you turn 21, and in doing so, create a masterpiece that is still performed more than 200 years after your death. The Piano Concerto No. 9 in E-flat major, K. 271 is classified as an "early" concerto, but it marks a clear break from the earlier piano concertos. The maturity of the writing, the technical demands of the solo part, and the emotional depth of the music all combine to affirm this as the work of a young man, not an amazingly gifted child. This concerto is also, surprisingly, Mozart's longest piano concerto, but one hardly notices the time passing. The music is full of quintessentially Mozartean invention and sparkle. The opening Allegro begins with an original stroke – where listeners would have expected a lengthy orchestral introduction of the movement’s themes, Mozart instead prefaces this with a little orchestral flourish answered by an amiable rejoinder from the soloist. The minor key Andantino, itself another innovation, departs from purely instrumental writing. Mozart, as he often did in later works, borrows recitative style from opera to create an intimate, moving declaration of sadness, which the piano emphasizes with a series of downwards appoggiaturas, or "sighs," that suggest weeping. Mozart contrasts the Andantino with a finale of high-spirited comedy. In this movement he again experiments with structure. The main theme, strongly akin to Monostatos's air 'Alles fült' from The Magic Flute, is punctuated twice, first by a dramatic cadenza, and secondly by a stately and melodious minuet. This lovely and quite unexpected interlude - a theme with four elaborate variations - is enriched by some of Mozart's most poetic touches. Here we find all the shimmering brilliance and buoyancy we expect in a Mozart piano concerto, as the solo passages fly up and down the keyboard, but still maintaining the great combination of whit and elegance. Symphony No. 40 in G Minor, K 550 W.A. Mozart (1756-1791) Late in Mozart’s very short life, his financial circumstances were not at all comfortable. By mid-1788 he had moved from the center of Vienna to the suburb of Alsergrund in search of cheaper rental rates. There is a sad selection of surviving letters from this period written by Mozart to a fellow Mason in which he pleads for loans and other financial assistance. Personal difficulty did not lead to writer’s block in these last years, thankfully, as Mozart remained productive right to the end of his life. Mozart's last three symphonies were all written in the summer of 1788 in a period of exceptional productivity, even by his standards. The three may have been conceived as a set since they are complementary in style. Each of the three shows a high degree of individuality and originality and all contain major innovations in symphonic construction that were to influence the works of Haydn and Beethoven and indeed generations of later composers. One of the most striking features of the symphonies is the use of counterpoint within the musical texture. Mozart had become very interested in the works of Bach at this time, but rather than copy his great predecessor, he found innovative ways to incorporate contrapuntal writing in his own style. There is also much of Mozart the opera composer in his late symphonies and in the Symphony No. 40, we hear some of his most dramatic, emotionally charged music. The opening theme of symphony is one of the most know passages in the symphonic genre. It opens with a short and steady accompaniment in the violas, followed by a hushed, nervous introductory melody in the violins. This sets the tone of urgency and anxiety that pervades the entire work. The second movement Andante is the only movement in a major key. But while it begins serenely enough, it, too, turns dark and intense in the course of its development. Even the Minuet, usually the most lightweight movement in a Classical Era symphony, retains the original key and is characterized by a series of phrases ending on successively higher and higher notes, ratcheting up the emotional tension. Restatements of the theme in imitative counterpoint pile on top of each other in their agitation. The Trio, at least, provides an emotional break, however slight. The theme of the finale is a musical portrayal of hysteria, a shrill arpeggio ending in a sighing figure, followed by a pounding motive in the orchestra that closes with an echo of the sigh in the lower register. Despite a lyrical second theme, the movement is in constant nervous motion. Finally, Mozart subverts the custom of ending symphonies in minor keys in the major, and stays in G minor to the end. Grace and charm are indeed present, but Mozart offers obsessive energy and passion, too, in a very captivating way. Notes by Kedrick Armstrong ’16, BM History and Literature Les Violons du Roy Bernard Labadie, Music & Artistic Director Violin I Pascale Gagnon Maud Langlois Nicole Trotier Véronique Vychytil Valérie Belzile Benoit Cormier Violin II Noëlla Bouchard Angélique Duguay Michelle Seto Marjolaine Lambert Édith Pedneault Viola Isaac Chalk Jean-Louis Blouin Annie Morrier Marina Thibeault Double Bass Raphaël McNabney Flute Marie-Andrée Benny Oboe Marjorie Tremblay Kirsten Zander Bassoon Mathieu Lussier Julia Harguindey Horn Erin Cooper-Guay Xavier Fortin Cello Benoit Loiselle Raphaël Dubé Mariève Bock For Opus 3 Artists David V. Foster, President & CEO Leonard Stein, Senior Vice President, Director, Touring Division Sarah Gordon, Manager, Artists & Attractions Irene Lönnblad, Associate, Touring Division Tim Grassel, Tour Manager