Overture Magazine: 2017-2018 Season November-December 2017 | Page 28

MOZART’S REQUIEM But as he grew older, he turned more to slower music expressing great intensity of feeling, such as his Symphony No. 1, cast in one long Adagio movement. And his grim-visaged works dealing with the tragedies of human life were gradually infiltrated by more joyful pieces, such as his ecstatic Rapture, heard here in 2014, and his very lyrical Oboe Concerto, heard in 2016. Receiving its World Premiere at these concerts, Rouse’s Berceuse Infinie (Infinite Lullaby) falls into the more lyrical and quiet category represented so beautifully by the Oboe Concerto. Commissioned by the BSO, completed on July 1, 2016 and dedicated to Marin Alsop, “it took its original inspiration from Ferruccio Busoni’s remarkable Berceuse élégiaque, a haunting cradle song in memory of Busoni’s mother,” as Rouse explains. He continues: “My work is intended as a largely tonal, contemplative piece lasting about 13 minutes. The ‘rocking motion’ so typical of the lullaby is almost always present, and despite a few isolated more dramatic moments, Berceuse Infinie is largely introspective and, I hope, consoling in tone. The score calls for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones, harp, celesta, timpani, bass drum, glockenspiel, tam-tam and strings.” The BSO 26 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org From 1986 to 1989, Christopher Rouse was the BSO’s composer- in-residence and continued as its new music advisor until 2000. He is a graduate of the Gilman School and Oberlin College and holds a doctorate from Cornell University. His numerous awards and honors include being named as Musical America’s Composer of the Year in 2009, as well as the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Music and the 2002 Grammy® Award for Best Contemporary Composition. In addition to his extraordinarily busy creative career, he is currently a professor of composition at New York’s Juilliard School. Instrumentation: Two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani, percussion, harp, celesta and strings. REQUIEM Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Born in Salzburg, Austria, January 27, 1756; died in Vienna, Austria, December 5, 1791 Listening to Mozart’s unfinished Requiem, one feels with special poignancy the tragedy of Mozart’s death at age 35 in the prime of his career. With this work, we are confronted not only with the question of “what might have been” in his future creative output had he lived on, but, very specifically, with what might have happened in this work had he survived to complete it. The writing of the Requiem in D Minor has been surrounded with myth and mystery, some of it true, some of it total fabrication. Yes, there was a mysterious stranger delivering a commission for a requiem mass from an anonymous patron to Mozart in July 1791. The unknown patron, however, was not a supernatural being (as Mozart sometimes seemed to have believed himself as he was writing the work), nor was he Mozart’s rival Antonio Salieri (as Peter Shaffer postulated in his fictional play Amadeus). He was Count Franz Walsegg-Stuppach, a wealthy musical amateur who liked to commission works by leading composers for his chamber ensemble and then try to pass them off as his own compositions. In February 1791, Count Walsegg had lost his young wife, Anna, and he anonymously commissioned a requiem from Mozart as a memorial to her. Although he was still in good health during the summer of 1791, Mozart seems to have reacted to this commission as a harbinger of his own death. While working on it, he was often depressed and told his wife, Constanze, that he felt that he was writing his own requiem. He also found plenty of excuses to set the work aside: first to fulfill a commission from Prague for the opera La Clemenza di Tito, then to write the great Clarinet Concerto for his friend Anton Stadler, next to put the finishing touches — including the famous overture — on his comic opera The Magic Flute and finally, in the midst of writing the Requiem, to write and premiere the Kleine Freymaurer Kantate, K. 623. Mozart scholar H. C. Robbins Landon estimates that Mozart only managed to work intermittently on the Requiem from October 8 to November 20, when he took to his bed with his fatal illness. As he lay dying, Mozart was still struggling to complete the work, but he was not dictating it to Salieri, à la the film Amadeus. Instead, he was working closely with his two students Joseph Eybler and Franz Xaver Süssmayr. Mozart managed