Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 May-June 2015 | Page 31

program notes { About the concert: Symphony No. 7 in C Major Jean Sibelius Born December 8, 1865 in Hämeenlinna, Finland; died September 20, 1957 in Järvenpää, Finland As Jean Sibelius grew older and his symphonic craft more sophisticated, composing actually became more difficult for him. As he struggled to complete his seventh and last symphony in the winter of 1924, he wrote, “I am on the wrong rails. Alcohol to calm my nerves and state of mind. How dreadful old age is for a composer! Things don’t go as quickly as they used to, and self-criticism grows to impossible proportions.” He composed through the night, and his wife, Aino, would find him in the morning slumped over the score at the dining-room table with a bottle of liquor beside him. Sibelius suffered from black depressions throughout his life, and heavy alcoholic consumption only compounded the problem. Just two years after he completed the Seventh Symphony, these demons plus nagging self-criticism of everything he wrote would prematurely silence him, even though he lived on for another 31 years to the venerable age of 91. Despite the struggle, the Seventh Symphony turned out to be one of his most extraordinary works, taking his unique approach to constructing a symphony to its ultimate level. Sibelius had long since rejected the traditional symphonic structure of four movements following conventional forms such as sonata, scherzo, and rondo. Instead he believed the symphony was like a river and that each river created its own shape. “The movement of the river water is the flow of the musical ideas and the river-bed that they form is the symphonic structure.” Thus the Seventh Symphony emerged as one great movement moving in waves of accelerating and decelerating tempos. It grew organically through the evolution of the most elemental musical ideas. In fact, there is only one true theme here, proclaimed three times by solo trombone and other brass and serving as mighty pillars supporting and shaping the symphony’s structure. And Sibelius uses the brass section only for this theme; otherwise he concentrates on strings and woodwinds, setting their very different colors in opposition rather than blending them. Like many of Sibelius’ greatest works, there is an underlying feeling of the human being standing in wonder before a big, powerful, and unknowable natural world. The symphony begins with very basic musical ingredients: a rumble of the timpani and a slow scale in the strings (scale patterns will underlie most of the melodic material) ascending to a fateful, mysterious harmony. A fluttering-birds motive appears in the woodwinds. Rising and falling scales crisscross, and the woodwind birds cry out with forlorn power. Now a magnificent, warm-toned passage for divided strings expands the scales of the opening into rich counterpoint. This culminates in the first appearance of the epic trombone-brass theme in the home key of C Major. JOIN US FOR THESE EXCITING CONCERTS! THE COLORS OF SOUND Saturday, May 9, 2015: 8pm Pack your bags for this musical journey, using a map of soundscapes in the atmospheric experience of Bolcom’s Symphony No. 3. Ravel’s dazzling Piano Concerto provides a vibrant conclusion to this colorful program. FAMILY FUN CONCERT Sunday, May 10, 2015: 3pm A Wizard is magically transported onto the stage. Unsure of how he got there, the conductor and orchestra try to find a way to send him home. Concerts at Gordon Center For Performing Arts, 3506 Gwynnbrook Avenue, Owings Mills Order your tickets today: Visit c X