Overture Magazine: 2016-2017 Season May-June 2017 | Page 37

program notes { and joyful in spirit while soaring to the highest realms of artistic expression. The period from 1806, when the Violin Concerto was composed, through 1808, when he introduced his Fifth and Sixth symphonies, was one of the most prolific in Beethoven’s career and brought forth a number of works that share the Violin Concerto’s world of sublime happiness — notably the Fourth Symphony and the “Pastoral” Symphony. The composer had recently completed two years of labor birthing his only opera, Fidelio, and the temporary conclusion of this project seemed to release a torrent of creativity for other musical forms. Moreover, he was enjoying a period of relative personal happiness and had made a provisional peace with his growing deafness. A note found in his sketches from the summer of 1806 proclaimed: “Your deafness shall be a secret no more, even where art is involved!” The Violin Concerto was a gift to Franz Clement, the concertmaster of Vienna’s Theater an der Wien, to be performed at the violinist’s benefit concert there on December 23, 1806. Then 26, Clement must have been an artist of remarkable gifts. A description of his playing comes down to us in The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians: “His style was not vigorous, nor his tone very powerful; gracefulness and tenderness of expression were its main characteristics. His technical skill appears to have been extraordinary.” Clement’s ease in playing the higher notes of the instrument’s range encouraged Beethoven to write a concerto in which, as Jan Swafford comments, the soloist becomes “a kind of ethereal presence floating through and above the orchestra.” Exploiting these qualities, the soloist begins with a demanding, cadenza-like passage, which whips through a thicket of fast figurations before vaulting to an exposed high note, perhaps the most hazardous solo entrance in the repertoire. Even Clement found this concerto, written for him, a tough nut — especially si nce Beethoven, writing on a tight deadline, finished it so close to the concert there was no time for a complete rehearsal. For years afterward, it languished, considered to be “unplayable.” In 1844, the great Joseph Joachim (then a 12-year-old prodigy, later to be the inspiration for Brahms’ Violin Concerto) gave it a brilliant performance in London under the baton of Felix Mendelssohn. Championing the work throughout his career, Joachim established it in the repertoire, where it is now considered to be the pinnacle of the violinist’s art. The opening movement is immense in length and scope. It opens arrestingly with the timpani tapping out a five-note Championing the work throughout his career, Joachim established it in the repertoire, where it is now considered to be the pinnacle of the violinist’s art. rhythm on the home note of D; this motive will pervade the entire movement. Between the taps, woodwinds sing a gently undulating theme. The orchestral violins then add spice by tapping on a D-sharp foreign to the key. All subsequent themes follow an optimistic ascending shape. Prominent among them is the woodwinds’ serenely rising melody over the tapping motive, which, though technically the second theme, actually becomes the movement’s most memorable. The violin makes its belated but unforgettable entrance described earlier. When the serene second theme reappears, Beethoven won’t let the soloist appropriate it— he has a better idea up his sleeve. The orchestra then reprises most of its exposition and the soloist repeats his grand entrance cadenza before sliding off to a quiet, mysterious development over the tapping motive in various instruments. Here the soloist introduces a tenderly wistful new episode in G Minor. The recapitulation is emphatic, as the full orchestra hammers out the tapping motive. After a solo cadenza, Beethoven plays his trump card: at last letting the violin sing the serene second theme in its softest, sweetest tones. Donald Francis Tovey calls the Largo second movement an example of Beethoven’s “sublime inaction.” A religious, exalted atmosphere reigns as muted strings sing a hymn-like theme, to which the soloist gives soaring, speech- like commentary. This theme, which never leaves the key of G, then progresses through several variations, interrupted briefly by a new solo melody, less exalted and more human. A solo cadenza bridges directly into the finale. The dancing rondo finale is light, but not lightweight. It transports the lofty serenity of the previous movements into a mood of rejoicing akin to the “Pastoral” Symphony. Following the last solo cadenza, Beethoven leads the music astray into the key of A-flat. Holding its own against rowdy Beethovenian cross- rhythms in the orchestra, the violin soars fleetly to a bold conclusion. Instrumentation: Flute, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, strings. Symphony No. 3 in C minor, “Organ” Camille Saint-Saëns Born in Paris, France, October 9, 1835; died in Algiers, Algeria, December 16, 1921 In 1886, Camille Saint-Saëns wrote more or less simultaneously the two concert works for which he is most famous today — although he originally never intended to publish the delicious Carnival of the Animals, a private joke created for a musical party. The other work, however, was a most serious and substantial effort, his Third Symphony in C Minor, commissioned by London’s Royal Philharmonic Society. Into it he poured all his formidable craft, suavity and penchant for the grand gesture. That both pieces are still perennial audience favorites would probably have tickled his Gallic sense of irony. Saint-Saëns dominated French musical life for the last 40 years of the 19 th century. As dazzling a prodigy as Mozart, he began composing at 3; at 10, May– June 2017 | O v ertur e 35