Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season January-February 2016 | Page 34

{ program notes key associated with Nature, and B minor /major, representing Humanity; just a half step apart on the scale, these keys are light-years apart harmonically. Listeners often strain to follow the program sections and, since many of them flow together, inevitably get lost. There are certain clear mileposts that will help you locate yourself, but generally it’s more satisfying simply to follow Strauss’ powerful overall trajectory. Prologue: Representing Zarathustra on his mountaintop greeting the sunrise before descending to man’s world, this epic music opens with the most elemental of motives: a solo trumpet intoning C-G-C, an idea representing Nature that will reappear throughout the work. This rises to a resplendent C-major chord. Then the music darkens to minor and descends from the mountaintop to a world of fear and ignorance. This section, Von den Hinterweltlern, refers to those who seek meaning in religion and the promise of the afterlife. Horns quietly quote the Gregorian chant setting of the Christian Credo, representing all religions. Strings in 16 parts then sing a devotional hymn of great beauty; this is the first of many chamber-like passages that lighten the texture of Strauss’ huge orchestra. Von der grossen Sehnsucht — “Of the Great Longing” — flows directly from the hymn. A buoyant, optimistic theme leaps more than three octaves from cellos to violins; it is the work’s second most important theme, representing humankind’s aspiring spirit. Here it decisively rejects religion, represented by the organ intoning the “Magnificat” chant. Von den Freuden und Leidenschaften —“Of Joys and Passions”— succeeds without pause and introduces a passionate new melody. This section relates to Nietzsche’s words: “Once you had passions and called them evil. But now you have only your virtues. … All your passions in the end became virtues, and all your devils became angels.” With its voluptuous chromatic downward scales, the music suggests that Strauss’ passions tend strongly toward the erotic. Toward the end, trombones cut through with an impatient theme, representing Satiety or Disgust. The music then 32 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org metamorphoses into mourning for Das Grablied —“The Grave Song”— a slow development of the “Passions” and “Man’s Spirit” themes. Von der Wissenschaft —“Of Science” —provides a moment for listeners to find their bearings. For science, Strauss chooses the most learned of forms, the fugue, and begins it in the depths of cellos and basses. It is built from the C-G-C nature motif followed by the outline of the other polarity, B minor. Turgid and clouded by thick chromatic harmonies, it provides even less comfort than religion, and the “Man’s Spirit” theme rejects it. The struggle continues in Der Genesende —“The Convalescent”— in which the fugue returns and battles furiously with both the “Spirit of Man” and “Disgust” themes. This culminates in a grand restatement of the Prologue’s C-major theme. The next section contains some of Zarathustra’s most extraordinary orchestral writing: glittering music for high woodwinds and glockenspiel setting up Das Tanzlied. This “Dance of the Superman”— Zoroaster’s celebration of his enlightenment— turns out to be a lilting Viennese waltz, and Strauss was roundly criticized for his frivolous choice. But for him, the waltz represented the universal spirit of the dance. As the dance reaches its apotheosis, 12 bell strokes cut through the texture, introducing Das Nachtwandlerlied — “The Night-Wanderer’s Song”— Nietzsche’s culminating poem (“O Man! Take Heed!”). Now the music closes in a quietly shocking epilogue. As violins and high woodwinds soar to a radiant B-major chord, humanity’s key, trombones and plucked low strings stubbornly interject Nature’s clashing C major. Humankind’s enlightenment is never fully achieved, Strauss seems to say, and Nature’s mysteries persist despite our most fervent efforts. Violin Concerto in D Major, opus 35 Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky Born in Votkinsk, Russia, May 7, 1840; died in St. Petersburg, Russia, November 6, 1893 Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto belongs to that illustrious group of masterpieces that were savaged by uncomprehending critics at their premieres. Nearly all the critics at its first performance — in Vienna on December 4, 1881 with Russian violinist Adolf Brodsky as soloist backed by the Vienna Philharmonic — gave the work negative reviews, but the one penned by the notoriously conservative Eduard Hanslick was so vicious it stung Tchaikovsky for years after. “Tchaikovsky is surely no ordinary talent, but rather, an inflated one … lacking discrimination and taste. … The same can be said for his new, long, and ambitious Violin Concerto. … The violin is no longer played; it is tugged about, torn, beaten black and blue.” Hanslick demolished the finale “that transports us to the brutal and wretched jollity of a Russian church festival. We see a host of savage, vulgar faces, we hear crude curses, and smell the booze.” Because of its flamboyant language and mind-boggling wrong-headedness, this is the review that has come down to us from a city that was generally unsympathetic to Tchaikovsky’s Russian intensity. A much fairer judgment of the concerto’s worth came from the Wiener Abendpost: “The first movement with its splendid, healthy themes, the mysterious, quiet middle movement … and the wild peasant dance make up a whole for which we would claim an outstanding place among contemporary compositions.” Today, this piece holds an outstanding place among all violin concertos. One of the more demanding works fo