Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season January-February 2016 | Page 31

program notes { practices of his day, creating a richer and more flexible dialogue between orchestra and soloist that would become the hallmark of his later concertos. It also contains the first of his sublime tragic slow movements. And since Mozart was also the performer, he crammed the concerto with virtuosic passages to display his fleet and flexible fingers for the honored guest. First movement: Mozart breaks the concerto norms of his period in the first measures when the pianist immediately answers the orchestra’s fanfare motive. But then the soloist bows out while the orchestra presents a bright-spirited introduction with a gracious pair of ascending lyrical themes for a second subject. Before the orchestra can finish, the impatient soloist has already launched his own exposition with a long trill. As became Mozart’s custom, the eventual recapitulation of the opening section is no mere reprise. Listen for a wonderful moment when the principal horn rather than the soloist sings the gracious second-subject melody. In C Minor, for Mozart a key for revealing deep feelings, the andantino second movement is the heart of the work. The piano’s long cantabile phrases are adorned with trills and other embellishments, but here they are deeply expressive rather than merely decorative. Piano and orchestral parts interweave marvelously; late in the movement, listen for a lovely passage in which the first violins echo the piano’s sighing phrases. We move out of the shadows for the very fast rondo finale. Indeed, the rondo theme, which keeps returning like a refrain, has a manic, Keystone-Copschase feeling to it, as Mozart shows Mlle. Jeunehomme how fast his fingers can fly. In the middle comes almost a movement within a movement as Mozart switches to a slower tempo and 3/4 time for an elegant minuet. Symphony No. 4 in D Minor, opus 120 Robert Schumann Born in Zwickau, Germany, June 8, 1810; died in Endenich, near Bonn, Germany, July 29, 1856 The year 1841 was perhaps the happiest and most productive of Robert Schumann’s troubled life. After he had finally married his adored Clara, despite her father’s opposition, his creative powers were in full flood, and he chose to devote them to the orchestra. The impetus was twofold. In a letter written in 1839, Clara had gently prodded him: “Dear Robert, don’t take it amiss i