Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season January-February 2016 | Page 26

{ program notes About the concert: Jealousy, Overture for Large Orchestra Leǒs Janáček Born in Hukvaldy, Moravia, July 3, 1854; died in Moravská Ostrava, August 12, 1928 Leoš Janáček was to become one of the 20th century’s greatest opera composers, but he was already nearly 50 years old when his first operatic masterpiece, his third opera Jenufa, was premiered on January 21, 1904 in his native Brno in Moravia, now part of the Czech Republic. Jenufa had taken nearly a decade — from 1894 to 1903 — to be completed. Jenufa tells the story of a love triangle between two stepbrothers, the handsome Steva and the less appealing Laca, who both love Jenufa, the village beauty. When Laca realizes she prefers Steva, he, maddened with jealousy, slashes her face with a knife to make her unattractive to other men. Janáček decided to preface the opera with an overture, which he wrote in 1894 at the beginning of his work on the score. This prelude contained thematic material from an earlier work also dealing with the subject of jealousy, a chorus for male voices called Zárlivec (“The Jealous Man”), that uses a theme from a Moravian folksong. When Jenufa was finally premiered, Janáček cut the overture from the performance. However, he did permit it to be performed by the Prague Philharmonic in 1906 as an independent short tone poem, and as Jealousy (Zárlivost), it has led a separate life from its opera ever since. After the violent, syncopated opening chords, bassoons and low strings quietly introduce an obsessive, malevolent tune that will haunt the piece with the same relentlessness that jealousy can dominate the human soul. Violin Concerto Jean Sibelius Born in Hämmenlina, Finland, December 8, 1865; died in Järvenpää, Finland, September 20, 1957 Despite all the acclaim he received as a composer, Sibelius nursed a hidden wound 24 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org over a musical accomplishment that had eluded him. In his diary in 1915, he wrote: “Dreamt I was twelve years old and a virtuoso.” Sibelius loved the violin above all instruments, but he had begun too late — age 14 — and lacked the physical coordination and temperament to become a virtuoso. In his early 20s, he tried for a position with the Vienna Philharmonic; failing the audition, he returned to his hotel room and wept for his lost dream. But in his late 30s, Sibelius fulfilled that dream vicariously by writing a magnificent violin concerto and one moreover filled with the most exacting virtuoso demands. Responding to the concertmaster of the Helsinki Philharmonic Willy Burmester’s urging, Sibelius —fresh from the triumph of his Second Symphony—began composing the concerto late in 1902, but barely completed the work in time for its premiere in February 1904. Sibelius in his younger days was a bon vivant with a fondness for liquor and Helsinki’s café life, which often got in the way of composing. Rushing to finish the concerto, he completely forgot Burmester, turning instead to a far less able fiddler Viktor Nováček. Nováček was the first, but not the last, to go down in flames tackling the work’s formidable difficulties, and the premiere was not a success. Sibelius then extensively revised the work in 1905, making the solo part just slightly easier. This work falls into the category of the soloist-dominated concerto rather than the more symphonically conceived concertos of Beethoven and Brahms. But it boasts greater musical complexity and a more interesting role for the orchestra than most virtuoso vehicles. Soloist and orchestra alternate in the foreground, often following different agendas. Over the shimmer of muted orchestral violins, the soloist opens the first movement, in the key of D minor, with a long solo melody that steadily grows in intensity and passion, sweeping over the instrument’s full range. From its component elements the movement grows. The mood suggests a Scandinavian bard reciting one of the Norse sagas Sibelius loved so well. At first subservient, the orchestra finally asserts itself with grim pow \