Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season January-February 2016 | Page 38

{ program notes in working-class Ayrshire on the southwest coast of Scotland below Glasgow. Despite these humble origins, he studied music at the University of Edinburgh and eventually took a doctorate at Durham University in England. After Durham, he returned to Scotland and began composing prolifically. Today his catalogue boasts more than 150 works. In recent years, MacMillan has created a series of colorful, exacting concertos for such virtuosi as violinist Vadim Repin, pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, oboist Nicholas Daniel, and violist Lawrence Power. Now we hear his Percussion Concerto No. 2 written for his fellow Scot, the extraordinary Colin Currie, and co-commissioned by the BSO. It is the successor to his spectacular first concerto for percussion instruments written for Evelyn Glennie in 1992, Veni, Veni, Emmanuel, which has received more than 500 performances worldwide to date. This Second Percussion Concerto, however, differs from the first in that it is written for a large symphony orchestra, while Veni, Veni was created for chamber orchestra. And it actually features two percussionists in the orchestra who sometimes interact with the soloist, as in the Concerto’s opening moments when all three play marimbas against each other in whirling counterpoint creating in MacMillan’s words “a meta-marimba,” or in the drive to the finish in which the orchestral percussionists urge the soloist on. With the number of instruments available to a percussionist today, MacMillan explains “you have to be selective so, apart from marimba and some drums, I homed in on metal percussion for the concerto. This still allowed a lot of variety, and the journey between untuned and tuned metal became very important. Colin also introduced me to a recent instrument, the aluphone, … a metallophone that combines the sounds of vibraphone and bells.” Though designed as a single movement lasting about 24 minutes, the Concerto actually subdivides into three distinct sections: “a substantial fast and lively [opening] section, a middle 36 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org section that begins ritualistically and subsides into a dreamy, reflective mood, and a third section that gradually builds in momentum and speed.” A dissonant three-note motive launches the opening section and will return frequently and be expanded by both the orchestra and soloist. The soloist plays hyperactive, vigorously rhythmic music on the marimba, aided and abetted by the two orchestral marimbists. This music grows more frenzied as the soloist moves to the metal instruments and drum. A police siren pierces the violence. Gradually, the soloist succeeds in calming the orchestra along with a portentous tuba solo. A quiet, lyrical slow section gradually emerges. Here is the loveliest, most imaginative writing in the score as MacMillan, in his words, explores “how the instruments can be played against type, producing delicate and light sonorities, and how they can be expressive.” The soloist first moves to the tuned cowbells and then to the steel drum, heard so prominently in Caribbean music. Here, combined with piano, two flutes, and a melancholy viola solo, its tremulous sound takes on the oriental coloration of an Indonesian gamelan. Grim low brass disturb this tranquil interlude. The low strings begin to whir busily, driving a transition into the faster final section. Here, MacMillan said he wanted to create “a clangorous sheen, almost like a halo” with the percussion instruments. From this, a noble, deeptoned chorale emerges in the lower brass instruments and powers an exhilarating drive to the finish line, with the soloist moving rapidly between the contrasting instruments of his battery. Variations on an Original Theme, Enigma, opus 36 Edward Elgar Born in Broadheath, England, June 2, 1857; died in Worcester, England, February 23, 1934 Seldom in musical history has one work propelled a composer from obscurity to fame to the degree that the Enigma Variations did for Edward Elgar. Before the Enigma, he was a provincial composer in the west of England, somewhat in demand for writing oratorios for the regional choral festivals that flourished in that era, but also needing to give music lessons to the local gentry to make ends meet. After the Enigma’s premiere in London on June 19, 1899, Elgar instantly became England’s leading composer. A year later, Cambridge University awarded him an honorary doctorate, and a knighthood followed in 1904. The Enigma Variations is an unusual and felicitous blending of the theme and variations form with a series of beguiling, psychologically astute musical portraits of Elgar’s friends and family. It began innocently one evening in October 1898 when the composer was improvising at the piano for his wife. She praised a theme he’d invented, and he began to vary it to match the personalities of members of their circle. So far, the plan was straightforward enough, and although Elgar cryptically labeled the variations with initials, they were easily decoded to reveal his wife’s and friends’ identities. But a month before the premiere, the composer threw in his “enigma.” In a letter to the work’s first annotator, he wrote: “The enig