Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 17

orchestra’s theme to show off its coloratura abilities and the exciting contrasts between its lowest and highest notes. There is also melancholy in this outwardly serene music, and after its initial gymnastics, the clarinet expresses this in a slightly mournful melody in the minor mode. The clarinet’s most haunting tones are displayed in the Adagio second movement, one of Mozart’s most sublime slow movements. Here the clarinet becomes a great operatic diva, its drooping phrases singing of loneliness and loss. Mozart experienced considerable depression in his last year and had often remarked that he did not expect a long life. His music frequently expresses a profound sense of life’s transitory nature and the sadness that hides behind beauty— and never more poignantly than here. Such thoughts of mortality are mostly pushed aside in the merry Rondo finale. The clarinet leads off with a chirpy rondo refrain exploiting the instrument’s comic side. But high comedy also includes room for more serious emotions, as Mozart had demonstrated over and over in his great comic operas. And thus, between returns of this refrain, he develops other melodies in surprisingly moving ways, and his adventurous harmonies wander into darker minor-key territory. However, Mozart never forgets who is the star and gives the clarinetist plentiful opportunities to show off his fleet virtuosity. Instrumentation: Two flutes, two bassoons, two horns and strings. Overture to The Magic Flute Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart In the last three years of his all-too-brief life, Mozart experienced a steady stream of disappointments. The fickle Viennese public seemed to have lost interest in his music, a major court appointment always eluded him, and he had to borrow large sums of money from his Masonic brother Michael Puchberg to support his wife and children. Then in the middle of 1791, another fellow Mason, the singer-impresario Emanuel Schikaneder, came to the rescue Costumes of Downton Abbey march 1, 2014–January 4, 2015 • winterthur museum View exquisite costumes and accessories worn upstairs and downstairs on the period drama television series. to purchase timed tickets to the exhibition, please call 800.448.3883 or visit winterthur.org/downtonabbey. Advance purchase of tickets is strongly recommended. timed tickets required. Included with general admission. members free. The exhibition at Winterthur is presented by With support from the Glenmede Trust Company Downton Abbey ®. Photographs © Nick Briggs, Carnival Film & Television Limited, 2010–12. All Rights Reserved. Winterthur is nestled in Delaware’s beautiful Brandywine Valley on Route 52, midway between New York City and Washington, D.C. Take I-95 to Exit 7 in Delaware. MArch– April 2014 | O v ertur e 15