Overture Magazine: 2017-2018 Season FINAL_BSO_Overture_May_June | Page 22

MOZART AND BRAHMS Sophisticated elegance for the discerning gentleman. The Shops At Kenilworth 824 Kenilworth Drive Towson, Maryland 443-652-3218 www.wilkesandriley.com 20 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org makes his conducting debut in Handel’s Theodora with the NDR Chorus. This season, Alexej Gerassimez and the Konzerthausorchester Berlin premiered Armstrong’s Concerto for Percussion and Orchestra. BASF Ludwigshafen commissioned Armstrong to compose a clarinet quintet, which receives its premiere by Matthias Schorn and the Armida Quartet. Other commissioners include the Leipzig Gewandhaus, the Volkswagen Autostadt Movimentos Festival and the Philharmonic Orchestra Kiel. Armstrong’s solo albums include Liszt: Symphonic Scenes (“handsomely demonstrates the startling rich context given to the Mephisto Waltz when heard after the multi-dimensional Procession by Night”— Gramophone) and Bach, Ligeti, Armstrong (“one of the very few CDs that the world was waiting for”— Kulturradio RBB), both released by Sony Classical. Armstrong transformed the Eglise Sainte-Thérèse, a decommissioned Art Deco church in northeast France, into the home of imaginative concerts and art exhibitions. The 2017 festival featured Renaud Capuçon, with whom Armstrong regularly plays, and the film director Bruno Monsaingeon. The 2018 festival features Alfred Brendel, who, along with Armstrong, engages in a Conversation between Words and Music. Born in 1992, Armstrong studied at the Curtis Institute of Music and at the Royal Academy of Music in London. At seven, he began studying science at universities including the University of Pennsylvania and Imperial College London. He earned a master’s degree in pure maths at the University of Paris VI. Brendel, who has guided Armstrong as teacher and mentor since 2005, ascribes to him “an understanding of the great piano works that combines freshness and subtlety, emotion and intellect.” Their relationship was captured in the film Set the Piano Stool on Fire by Mark Kidel. Kit Armstrong makes his BSO debut. About the Concert LES PRÉLUDES Franz Liszt Born in Raiding, Hungary, October 22, 1811; died in Bayreuth, Germany, July 31, 1886 Franz Liszt’s career as the greatest keyboard virtuoso of the 19 th century began when he was only in his teens. By the time he’d reached his mid-30s, he had nothing left to prove as a performer and was growing weary of endless tours of the musical capitals of Europe. In 1848, he decided to settle in Weimar, the cultured German city that had nurtured Goethe, and devote his energies to composition. Soon, his mistress Princess Carolyne Sayn-Wittgenstein left her Russian husband to join him there. The Weimar years (1848–61) were a prolific creative period during which Liszt wrote not only piano and vocal works but also turned his radical musical ideas loose on the orchestra. He produced two large programmatic symphonies, Faust and Dante, and 12 “symphonic poems,” of which Les Préludes is the third and most popular. A true Romantic artist, Liszt saw literature and music as intertwined. A poem, a play or a novel could inspire a musical work, and music could carry the emotions expressed by words to deeper levels. Liszt’s symphonic poems, however, do not tell detailed stories in music. All he really needed was a broad emotional scenario to set his music in motion, and in the case of Les Préludes, there seem to have been two. When this music was first written in 1848–49, it was an overture to Les Quatres Éléments (The Four Elements): choral settings of four poems with a Mediterranean maritime theme by the Provençal writer Joseph Autan. By 1854, Liszt had become intrigued with the Nouvelles Méditations poétiques by the French Romantic poet Alphonse de Lamartine. Sensing an expressive relationship, he returned to his old overture, sheered off its choruses and reworked it to match Larmartine’s themes of love and war with pastoral interludes. Prefacing the score, he — or more likely