Overture Magazine: 2017-2018 Season January-February 2018 | Page 26

TCHAIKOVSKY PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 quick-tempo dances in duple or two-beat rhythm. But the fourth, “Hornpipe Dance,” is in slow 3/4 time and features a haunting violin solo. CONCERTO FOR ORCHESTRA Béla Bartók As Fascism swept over Europe on the eve of World War II, many of the continent’s leading musicians fled, either to save their lives or for reasons of conscience. Béla Bartók was one of the latter: he despised the Nazis and everything they stood for. His was a painful choice, for spiritually and artistically he drew all his nourishment from his native land; leaving Hungary for America in late 1940 was a bitter exile from which he never recovered. The five years Bartók spent in the United States before succumbing to leukemia at age 64 were tormented by illness, financial insecurity and anxiety about the war. For two years, he wrote nothing of importance and claimed he no longer had any desire to compose. In 1943, his fellow Hungarian émigrés, conductor Fritz Reiner and violinist Joseph Szigeti, grew anxious about his plight and prevailed upon Serge Koussevitzky, music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a champion of new music, to commission a work from him. But they urged the maestro to be careful in his approach, for Bartók would absolutely refuse if he thought this were an act of charity. Koussevitzky visited the ailing composer in the hospital and offered him $1,000 to write what was to become his most popular work—the Concerto for Orchestra. The commission proved to be a miraculous tonic both for Bartók’s health and his creativity. Leaving the hospital for Saranac Lake in the Adirondacks, he composed the Concerto for Orchestra between August and October 1943. More commissions poured in, and Bartók’s creative drought was over. The concerto’s premiere by Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra on December 1, 1944 was a triumph, and its brilliant writing and greater accessibility finally made Bartók a popular composer. 24 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org The BSO As an introduction to the work, Bartók wrote: “The general mood of the work represents, apart from the jesting second movement, a gradual transition from the sternness of the first movement and lugubrious death-song of the third, to the life assertion of the last one.” Instead of writing a concerto that showed off the abilities of a soloist, Bartók displayed the virtuosity of a whole orchestra. Its five movements center on a tragic “Elegia,” and its finale is a celebratory Hungarian round dance. Pay special attention to the first movement’s slow introduction, for it previews the bitter twisting theme—in flutes and muted trumpets, then loudly in the strings—that will later reappear in the third-movement “Elegia.” It accelerates into the boldly outlined theme of the main Allegro vivace section. Seriousness is interrupted by the second movement, “Game of Pairs,” in which duos of bassoons, oboes, clarinets, flutes and muted trumpets present five wry little dances to the dry accompaniment of a side drum. After a serene brass chorale, the pairs return with elaborations of the dances. The “Elegia” returns to the tragic mood and music of the first movement’s introduction. Surrounding the thematic core are passages of what Bartók called “night music”: eerie swirls of woodwinds and strings with oboe and piccolo bird cries. The fourth-movement “Intermezzo” alternates two folk-like themes: a chirpy one led by solo oboe and a swooning romantic one for violas and strings. Midway through comes a rude interruption: the endlessly repeated march theme from Shostakovich’s Seventh Symphony, which had recently become a worldwide hit. The mad tempo and raspberries blown by the brass leave no doubt about Bartók’s dislike of this piece! With his blazing finale, Bartók achieves “life-assertion” with a high- speed round dance. Here the string’s virtuosity is demonstrated in their wild perpetual-motion playing, while the brass rejoice in some of the most intricate fugal writing the composer ever created. Wrestling with cancer during the bleakest days of the war, Bartók showed a heroic faith by affirming the ultimate triumph of life and creativity. Instrumentation: Three flutes including piccolo, three oboes including English horn, three clarinets including bass clarinet, three bassoons including contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps and strings. PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 IN B-FLAT MINOR Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Born in Votkinsk, Russia, May 7, 1840; died in St. Petersburg, Russia, November 6, 1893 If one had to pick a work that epitomizes the Romantic piano concerto, it would