Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 16

{ Program Notes given master classes throughout the U.S. and in Europe. Anthony McGill last appeared with the BSO in March 2004, performing Copland’s Clarinet Concerto, with Lara Webber conducting. About the concert: Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Born in Salzburg, Austria, January 27, 1756; died in Vienna, December 5, 1791 With his Symphony in A Major — and some would say, to a lesser extent, five months earlier with his tempestuous Symphony No. 25 in G Minor — Mozart became a fully mature creator, speaking with a voice unlike any of the composers who had come before him. Perhaps the summer and early fall of 1773 in Vienna, where Mozart had been exposed to much new music including quartets by Haydn, spurred this final maturation. In Symphony No. 29, we hear conventions Mozart had used before: a muted slow movement of reticent courtly style, a crisply energetic minuet, a dashing hunting finale. But somehow these conventions have been elevated to something greater, more complex and subtler in tone. Two of the miracles of this enchanting work are its perfect Classical balance between grace and energy, and Mozart’s ability to draw the maximum of color and expression out of a very small orchestra composed of a few strings and pairs of oboes and horns. Years later when he moved on to Vienna, Mozart still recognized the quality of this symphony and asked his father to send him the score for performance at his Viennese Akademie concerts. The equilibrium between lyrical grace and vigorous energy is best heard in the sonata-form first movement. Unsual for this period, Mozart begins his symphony very softly, but with intensity seething underneath in the form of a dramatic octave plunge to launch the principal theme and harmonic unrest. A series of charming melodic ideas form the second 14 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org subject, culminating in a lovely imitative duet between first and second violins. The middle development section packs the maximum of excitement in the minimum of space: beginning with fast scales chasing each other around the string parts and ending with a tenderly reflective passage. Movement two is a superb example of how much color and atmosphere Mozart can draw from his little band. This is a very hushed and refined movement using muted strings, courtly double-dotted rhythms, exquisite ornamental figures, and chromatically altered notes for rich harmonic color. Yet while it has the manners of rococo court music, it also has a sadness, a depth of feeling that is pure Mozart. The plangent tones of the woodwind quartet contribute to this effect. Only for the last phrase of this misty music do the strings remove their mutes, letting the sunshine through. Again, dotted rhythms dominate the third-movement minuet, but they have a brusque energy here and a touch of impudence and aggression. This is slightly tempered by a trio section in which the dotted rhythms are mostly smoothed away. Here is an early example of Mozart’s rebellious spirit sabotaging convention. Energy gallops over grace in the Allegro con spirito finale in the style of the hunting finales so popular in Mozart’s day. But this one has a verve, an attention to detail, and a dramatic development section that lofts it above its mates. As in the first movement, its principal theme opens with a decisive octave plunge. Listen for the baying of the dogs in the grace-note-accented second theme. Each section of the sonata form is delineated by a quick, rising violin scale at its close. Horn calls and one last rising scale signal the end of Mozart’s first symphonic masterpiece. Instrumentation: Two oboes, two horns and strings. Clarinet Concerto in A Major, K. 622 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mozart’s last year was one of his most prolific composing periods—almost as if he knew he was racing against the clock. By that time, the clarinet, with its fascinating chameleon character, had become probably his favorite instrument— certainly his favorite wind instrument. It was quite a newcomer in 1791, having only been introduced into orchestras around 1770. One of its finest players was Anton Stadler, whom Mozart had met in 1784 and subsequently befriended. Stadler seems to have been a rather shady character, and Mozart’s wife and family disapproved of him, especially when he borrowed a considerable sum of money from the composer who was himself deep in debt. But Mozart liked Stadler’s lighthearted nature and greatly admired his artistry. For Stadler he composed his best-loved chamber work, the Clarinet Quintet, as well as the Clarinet Concerto. It was quite a newcomer in 1791, having only been introduced into orchestras around 1770. Stadler loved the clarinet’s low register and designed a slightly longer version, known as the basset clarinet, which added two more pitches on the bottom. And so Mozart wrote his concerto for this modified clarinet, giving much emphasis to its lower range. Throughout, he showed his great love and thorough understanding of the instrument’s special qualities: its singing ability and sparkling agility, its capacity to move easily between comedy and tragedy. However, sometime after his death, his original score was lost. The concerto we hear today is a version Mozart’s publisher edited so it could be played by clarinets without Stadler’s low extension. A mood of gracious lyricism prevails in the first movement. Mozart chose a softer-toned orchestral ensemble — gentle flutes instead of the more penetrating oboes, no brass except for two horns — to set his soloist in high relief. Graceful, flowing melodies abound, exploiting the clarinet’s rich singing tone. But soon after its entrance, the clarinet flies free of the