The Timeless Music
Transcription
The Timeless Music
476 9422 S WEET S ERENADE THE TIMELESS MUSIC OF MOZART “O Mozart, immortal Mozart, how many, how infinitely many inspiring suggestions of a finer, better life have you left in our souls!” – F RANZ S CHUBERT Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1756-1791 1 Soave sia il vento (Gentle be the breeze) from Così fan tutte, KV588 Amanda Thane soprano, Fiona Janes mezzo-soprano, David Brennan baritone, The Australian Opera and Ballet Orchestra, Carlo Rizzi conductor 2’43 2 Adagio from Clarinet Concerto in A major, KV622 Donald Westlake clarinet, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Robert Pikler conductor 7’33 3 Romance (Andante) from Serenade in G major, KV525 ‘Eine kleine Nachtmusik’ Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Geoffrey Lancaster conductor 4’21 4 Deh, vieni alla finestra (Oh, come to the window – Serenade) from Don Giovanni, KV527 2’31 Teddy Tahu Rhodes baritone, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Ola Rudner conductor 5 Adagio from Serenade in B-flat major, KV361 ‘Gran Partita’, arr. Christian Gottlieb Schwenke Diana Doherty oboe, Sinfonia Australis Ensemble 5’04 Ruhe sanft, mein holdes Leben (Rest gently, my sweet love) from Zaide, KV344 Shu-Cheen Yu soprano, The Queensland Orchestra, Brett Kelly conductor 6’01 6 2 7 Andante from Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, KV467 ‘Elvira Madigan’ 6’59 Vera Kameneva piano, Australian Chamber Orchestra, Christopher Hogwood conductor 8 Bei Männern, die Liebe fühlen (In men who feel love) from Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute), KV620 3’13 Isobel Buchanan soprano, John Pringle baritone, Queensland Symphony Orchestra, Richard Bonynge conductor 9 Larghetto from Clarinet Quintet in A major, KV581, arranged for string quintet The Australia Ensemble (Dene Olding, Dimity Hall violins, Irena Morozov, Hartmut Lindemann violas, Julian Smiles cello) 3 7’05 0 Lacrimosa from Requiem, KV626 Sydney Philharmonia Symphonic Choir, Sydney Philharmonia Orchestra, Antony Walker conductor ! Andante from Divertimento in D major, KV136, arranged for guitar quartet by Timothy Kain Guitar Trek (Timothy Kain, Fiona Walsh, Richard Strasser, Peter Constant guitars) 3’21 4’27 @ Larghetto from Piano Concerto No. 27 in B-flat major, KV595 Imogen Cooper piano, Australian Chamber Orchestra, Richard Tognetti director 7’19 £ Ave verum Corpus, KV618 Sydney Philharmonia Motet Choir, Sydney Philharmonia Orchestra, Antony Walker conductor 3’27 $ Serenade (Deh, vieni alla finestra) from Don Giovanni, KV527, transcribed for piano solo by Wilhelm Backhaus Dennis Hennig piano 4’14 % O Isis und Osiris from Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute), KV620 Conal Coad bass, Tasmanian Symphony Orchestra, Dobbs Franks conductor 3’06 ^ Fantasia in D minor, KV397 John Champ piano 5’23 Total Playing Time 76’52 strangely ambiguous one – a bittersweet farce of disguised lovers attempting to woo their fiancées into betrayal and almost succeeding. Mozart responded to the complexities of plot and characterisation with an equally intricate and “symphonic” score. In the poignant ensemble Soave sia il vento from Act I, Fiordiligi and Dorabella (with the cynical Don Alfonso) bid farewell to their lovers who they believe are going to war: “May the wind be gentle, may the waves be calm, and may all the elements be kind and grant our desires.” When we talk about Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, we usually have to resort to words like “genius” and “prodigy”, we evoke the divine, we wonder at the slightly childish sense of humour revealed in letters to his family and friends – the supremely gifted musician with a child’s soul who died a pauper and was buried in a forgotten grave. Our understanding of Mozart is coloured by 200 years of misunderstanding and myth. Mozart was indeed a prodigy, composing simple symphonies at eight, but these give very little indication of the genius he was to become, for he matured slowly, composing his best work in the last decade of his life. He was thoughtful and painstaking, revising often (hardly “taking dictation from God”, as Salieri complains in Peter Shaffer’s play Amadeus), revisiting operas and improving them after their premieres. He was also very successful: he had several hit operas, and earned more than any other composer in Europe. In his own time, Mozart was renowned as a towering genius. When he at last grew into his gift, Mozart produced music of unprecedented formal, harmonic and melodic perfection. Taking the familiar forms of the Classical tradition (symphony, concerto, opera), Mozart discovered rich new possibilities for human expression, making music that is both of its time and timeless. The clarinet is the Mozartian instrument par excellence. With its vocal colour, its ability to move from opera buffa high spirits to soaring beauty, it’s no wonder that Mozart composed one of his finest concertos for the clarinet (and its great exponent Anton Stadler). The second movement Adagio is a quasi-operatic aria that showcases the clarinet’s dusky voice to stunning effect. Mozart would be rather surprised to learn that works such as his serenades Eine kleine Nachtmusik and the Gran Partita are still being enjoyed and given serious attention today. For him, these works were essentially disposable occasional pieces written as background music for elegant parties. The Romance contrasts a blithe opening motif with a more urgent minor key episode – a hint that Mozart interrupted composing the dark Don Giovanni to write it. The late gem Così fan tutte (Women are like that) vies with The Marriage of Figaro for the title of Mozart’s greatest comedy, but it is a 4 5 As blackly funny as it is dramatic, Mozart’s potent masterpiece Don Giovanni (or The Rake Punished) was a sensation from its first performance in Prague in 1787. And no wonder: in addition to a racy plot, Don Giovanni contains some of Mozart’s most brilliant and compelling music. In Deh, vieni alla finestra, the eponymous anti-hero serenades the maid of his enemy, Elvira (one of many whom the Don has loved and left), accompanying his honeyed words with his mandolin: “Oh, come to your window, my darling... If you deny me all solace, I shall die here before your eyes.” Leben which the virtuous heroine, imprisoned in a harem, sings to a slave: “Rest gently, my dear one, sleep till your happiness awakens.” The slave falls in love with her and vows to liberate her. And since 18th-century operas of this sort always ended happily ever after, we can assume that they get their freedom. The Gran Partita for 13 winds (and grand it is, lasting longer than any of Mozart’s symphonies), is justly famous for the serene third movement Adagio. This is the music that underscores the moment in Milos Forman’s film Amadeus where Salieri apprehends Mozart’s genius for the first time. In the Adagio, a moment of serene beauty is achieved through the simplest of means: a melody is passed from instrument to instrument over a gently pulsing background. In this arrangement by Schwenke, Diana Doherty’s oboe is given the starring role. Mozart completed his Piano Concerto No. 21 on 9 March 1785, just in time for its premiere the next day. After moving to Vienna in the early 1780s Mozart made a nice living as a concert pianist, composing a string of great concertos to showcase his virtuosity. The second movement Andante’s atmosphere of dreamy lyricism is ushered in by the muted strings’ broad statement of the melody over murmuring triplets. The piano then elaborates and embellishes the theme, weaving its sound into the texture of the orchestra in a striking departure from the usual Classical alternation of soloist and orchestra. This movement was used extensively in the 1967 Swedish film Elvira Madigan, where it struck such a chord with moviegoers that the concerto has been known by that nickname ever since. The opera Zaide exists as a tantalising fragment that looks forward to themes explored in The Abduction from the Seraglio. The 23-year-old Mozart composed 15 or so numbers for the exotic Singspiel (musical comedy), the best known of which is Ruhe sanft, mein holdes The Magic Flute is Mozart’s truest musical selfportrait. In it he gave free reign not only to his fertile and occasionally whimsical musical imagination, and his at times juvenile sense of humour, but also to his optimistic vision of a world united in brotherly (and conjugal) love. 6 “Mozart tapped...the source from which all music flows, expressing himself with a spontaneity and refinement and breath-taking rightness that has never since been duplicated.” – A ARON C OPLAND 7 Pamina and Papageno’s Act I duet Bei Männern, die Liebe fühlen celebrates just such a union with music as “artless” and unforgettable as a folksong: “In men who feel love, a good heart, too, is never lacking. Sharing these sweet urges is then women’s duty. We want to enjoy love; it is through love alone that we live...There is nothing nobler than woman and man.” Divertimento in D major, KV136 when he was 16, about the time when he started to produce his first mature masterpieces. Originally for string quartet, the Divertimento was one of three he composed in Salzburg in 1772. In an arrangement for the guitar quartet Guitar Trek, the Italianate character of the lilting 3/4-time Andante is brought to the fore. It wasn’t uncommon in Mozart’s day for composers and publishers to arrange and adapt works for other combinations of instruments to bring their works to a wider public, especially when the original versions demanded the skills of a virtuoso clarinettist, as Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet does. The Larghetto loses none of its soulful grace in translation to string quintet. The Piano Concerto No. 27 was sketched in 1788 but not completed and performed until the final year of Mozart’s life, 1791, earning the work a somewhat valedictory reputation. The concerto is transparently scored, almost like a chamber work, and the interplay between piano and orchestra in the sentimental but never cloying Larghetto is particularly felicitous. There is an aura of tragic legend surrounding Mozart’s Requiem, his final work. Mozart, suffering from the last stages of what was probably rheumatic fever, became convinced that he had been poisoned and that the Requiem, commissioned by an anonymous patron, would be his own. The Lacrimosa’s eloquent choral dissonances and the dramatic sighs of the strings evoke the mournful Day of Judgment, eventually taking on a quietly pleading quality as the text begs God for mercy. Mozart’s Ave verum Corpus demonstrates best Artur Schnabel’s dictum that Mozart’s music is “too simple for children but too difficult for adults”. The 46 bars of this piece are easy enough for a school choir to sing yet they achieve a degree of sincerity and candour that remains unsurpassed. In its three and a half minutes, Ave verum Corpus demonstrates Mozart’s timeless mastery. Until the recording era, most people’s first encounter with classical music was through the medium of the piano, either in their own homes or on the concert stage. Touring pianists would arrange popular arias, instrumental works and Divertimento is Italian for “diversion”, a more sophisticated version of what today we might call wallpaper music. Mozart composed his 8 shifts of mood – mysterious, soulful, anxious – compress a universe of expression into a tiny space. The Fantasia ends with music that is a summa of Mozart’s art: an allegretto that is, in Alfred Einstein’s words, both “naïve and celestial”. even symphonies for recital performance. Virtuoso Wilhelm Backhaus, noted as one of the early 20th century’s great exponents of Beethoven, made a virtuoso arrangement of Mozart’s Deh, vieni alla finestra for such occasions and for the entertainment of talented amateurs. Robert Murray The beginning of the second act of The Magic Flute sees our hero and heroine separated, awaiting trials of initiation, rituals inspired by Mozart’s involvement with the Masonic Order, then an influential “secret” society that included many of the Austrian intelligentsia. The Magic Flute abounds in Masonic symbolism, including its vaguely Egyptian setting. The high priest, Sarastro (a slightly menacing and ambiguous figure), sings the solemnly beautiful hymn-like aria O Isis and Osiris, asking the gods to help the young couple through their trials. While 21st-century classical musicians have been trained to scrupulously reproduce exactly what the composer has written, 18th-century musicians had no qualms about departing radically from the score or even making music up on the spot. According to Mozart scholar Robert Levin, Mozart’s contemporaries held his skills as an improviser in even higher regard than his skills as a composer. Today we get only a hint of his spontaneous genius via works such as the Fantasia in D minor KV397. Mercurial 9 Executive Producers Robert Patterson, Lyle Chan Mastering Thomas Grubb Editorial and Production Manager Natalie Shea Booklet Design Imagecorp Pty Ltd Cover Photo © APL/Cindy Kassab This compilation 2006 Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 2006 Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Distributed in Australia by Universal Music Group, under exclusive licence. Made in Australia. All rights of the owner of copyright reserved. Any copying, renting, lending, diffusion, public performance or broadcast of this record without the authority of the copyright owner is prohibited. “Whether the angels play only Bach praising God, I am not quite sure. I am sure, however, that en famille they play Mozart.” – K ARL B ARTH (1886-1968), S WISS THEOLOGIAN 10 11