KALICHSTEIN-LAREDO- ROBINSON TRIO
Transcription
KALICHSTEIN-LAREDO- ROBINSON TRIO
Thursday 16 june kalichstein-laredorobinson trio Joseph Kalichstein, piano Jaime Laredo, violin Sharon Robinson, cello 8 PM GENEROUSLY SPONSORED BY SUSAN GRAY AND ALEC DINGEE TRIO IN B-FLAT MAJOR FOR PIANO, VIOLIN, AND CELLO, OP. 11 Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) Allegro con brio Adagio Theme and Nine Variations on “Pria ch’io l'impegno”: Allegretto TRIO NO. 2 IN E MINOR, OP. 67 Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975) Andante Allegro con brio Largo Allegretto :: intermission :: PIANO TRIO NO. 2 IN C MAJOR, OP. 87 Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Allegro Andante con moto Scherzo: Presto Finale: Allegro giocoso 35TH SEASON | ROCKPORT MUSIC :: 31 WEEK 3 the program TRIO IN B-FLAT MAJOR FOR PIANO, VIOLIN, AND CELLO, OP. 11 Ludwig van Beethoven (b. Bonn, December 16, 1770; d. Vienna, March 26, 1827) Notes on the program by Sandra Hyslop Probably composed 1796-97; 21 minutes Historical evidence suggests that Beethoven wrote the Piano Trio in B-flat major for the clarinet virtuoso Joseph Beer (1744-1812). The key of the piece supports the supposition, since it would have been appropriate and comfortable for the B-flat clarinet, which had not as yet undergone the technical improvements of the Boehm system of clarinet key-work. Upon publication in 1798, either Beethoven or his Viennese publisher, Mollo & Co., prepared an alternate violin part—nearly identical to the clarinet version—should a standard piano trio ensemble want to perform it. Beethoven dedicated the work to a prominent patron of the musical arts (she had supported Gluck, Haydn, and Mozart), Countess Maria Wilhelmine von Thun und Hohenstein (1744-1800), whom he met through his aristocratic Viennese friends— the Lichnowsky family. For the last movement’s variations, Beethoven took the theme from a two-act comic opera by Joseph Weigl, L’amor marinaro [The Corsair, or Love among Seafarers]. The tune was an aria, “Pria ch’io l’impegno” [Before what I intended] that had found great popularity around Vienna at the time. Composers had used it as an air for dance music—even Paganini used it as the basis for a violin “Sonata con Variazioni” in later years. Following the Trio’s publication, a critic in the widely read music journal the Allgemeine Musikalische Zeitung [AMZ] complimented Beethoven on his newly found common touch: The clarinet virtuoso Joseph Beer (1744-1812) was known throughout Europe and Russia, not only as a touring concert artist, but also as a resident musician at the courts of the Duke of Orléans and of Catherine the Great in St. Petersburg. The last years of his life, from 1792 on, he spent as a member of the Royal Prussian Orchestra in Potsdam. Beethoven probably wrote the B-flat Major Trio for him. (22 May 1799) This Trio which is in places not easy, but which flows more smoothly than some other works of its composer, makes a good ensemble effect with the accompaniment played on a fortepiano. This composer, with his uncommon understanding of harmony and his love of profound expression, would give us a great deal of value, leaving the insipid efforts of many a celebrated composer far behind, if he would only write always in a more natural rather than far-fetched manner. Despite the AMZ’s critical approval of his “natural” manner, Beethoven himself is said to have regretted basing his variations upon this theme. It smacked too much of popular taste. This aspect of the work gave rise to a common nickname for the Op. 11 piece, which is sometimes labeled the “Gassenhauer Trio.” The word “Gasse” is German for “street,” or “alley,” and the term “Gassenhauer” can be roughly translated as “pop tune.” In 1800, one of those curious “piano contests,” which seemed to amuse people to no end in that era, took place at an evening musicale at the home of Beethoven’s patron, Count Fries. Beethoven was challenged by Daniel Steibelt (1765-1823), a composer “…This composer, with his uncommon and pianist who was itching to take on the great young Viennese virtuoso. Beethoven’s reputation as an improvisatory pianist could be understanding of harmony and likened to such jazz artists as Art Tatum or Keith Jarrett two centuries his love of profound expression, later. In the event, Beethoven’s performance in this Piano Trio, Opus 11, would give us a great deal of value, so daunted Steibelt that he conceded defeat. leaving the insipid efforts of many a celebrated composer far behind, if he would only write always in a more natural rather than far-fetched manner.” 32 :: NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Poor Herr Steibelt, to have been routed by such a charming work. As the music journal critic suggested, Opus 11 is an unpretentious Trio, engaging and entertaining for performers and listeners. The nine variations on Weigl’s theme are playful, not intimidating. It is likely that on that occasion, Beethoven gave the improvisations some extra “oomph.” TRIO NO. 2 IN E MINOR, OP. 67 Dmitri Shostakovich (b. Saint Petersburg, September 25, 1906; d. Moscow, August 9, 1975) Composed 1944; 29 minutes Shostakovich had already begun writing the Trio No. 2 when he learned of the sudden death, on February 11, 1944, of his close friend, the critic Ivan Sollertinsky. A music professor at the Leningrad Conservatory and the artistic director of the Leningrad Philharmonic, Sollertinsky had died of a sudden heart attack. “I have no words with which to express the pain that racks my entire being,” Shostakovich wrote to his friend Isaak Glikman. “May his memorial be our abiding love for him, and our faith in the inspired talent and phenomenal love for the art of music to which he devoted his matchless life…” The grief-stricken Shostakovich dedicated the work to his friend’s memory. The cello begins with a lonely statement from the upper reaches of the instrument’s harmonics. Inconsolable, it continues its eerie keening as the violin and piano begin to speak. Slowly they make contact. In a quickened tempo, the piano introduces the main theme, with musical topics that they can all engage in. The conversation is moody, ranging from a folk-like merriness to simmering anger. Dmitri Shostakovich was the pianist in the first performance of his Piano Trio No. 2 on November 14, 1944, in Leningrad. The violinist Dmitri Tsiganov (of the esteemed Beethoven Quartet) and the cellist Sergei Shirinsky completed the ensemble. Shifting to F-sharp major, the second movement is one of those hurtling, relentlessly driving Allegros that Shostakovich mastered so cannily. It is a rude Scherzo, with a milder Trio section in G major. The Scherzo stops abruptly, throwing the listener directly into the path of eight dark piano chords, the beginning of the Largo, a funereal movement in B-flat minor. Shostakovich sets the murky, anguished growl of these painful chords as a passacaglia base upon which the other instruments perform. The strings speak calmly, then urgently, while the piano continues the incessant tolling of its bleak thoughts. The movement exhausts itself as the strings drift away over the final dark chord. The final movement, created from real and invented Jewish melodies, cries and mocks, dances and flails about, sometimes anxious, sometimes violent, always harrowing. The jaunty rhythms provide the thinnest of disguises for this rattling dance of death.* It finally bursts forth blatantly in all its terror. The piano spews forth cascading, rippling arpeggios, and gradually the trio of instruments whimpers to a pause. Fragments of the mocking dance appear briefly. The piano remembers its eight chords, and tries them out once again before all the voices die. In August 1975 the slow movement of this Piano Trio was played as part of the memorial services accorded Shostakovich when his body was laid out in the Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory. *By the winter of 1944, word of the Nazi death-camp horrors had begun to circulate. Shostakovich regularly transferred into his compositions deeply held feelings about social and political issues. One can safely imagine this terrible dance of death not only as a private expression of grief over his dear friend’s premature passing, but more universally, as a despairing reaction against the unspeakable mass human tortures being exposed on the Western front. 35TH SEASON | ROCKPORT MUSIC :: 33 PIANO TRIO NO. 2 IN C MAJOR, OP. 87 Johannes Brahms (b. Hamburg, 1833; d. Vienna, April 1897) Notes on the program by Sandra Hyslop Composed 1880, 1882; 30 minutes Over the decades of his residency in Vienna, from 1862 until his death in 1897, Brahms made a habit of spending his summers in a resort area where he might compose music in rural tranquility. He would rent rooms and enjoy the pleasures of uninterrupted concentration in the morning, followed by relaxation in the evening. He preferred that the village be near friends and acquaintances, either permanent residents or summer vacationers, and he also enjoyed having a beer and a cigar with local residents. Disciplined in his habits, Brahms excelled at shutting out the world when composing, and he moved easily into sociability when he had completed his day’s work. In the case of the Piano Trio in C major, the second of his three works in that genre, Brahms began composition in the Vienna winter season of 1880-81, and completed it in June 1882 in the Austrian village of Bad Ischl, in the Salzkammergut. The first performance of the work occurred two months later, in an intimate social setting. Brahms’s good friend Ignaz Brüll (1846-1907), a fine pianist and composer, was on the piano bench, giving the composer an opportunity to enjoy his new composition as a member of the private audience. Brahms seems to have been pleased at what he heard, for when he submitted the work to his publisher, his accompanying letter declared, “You have not yet had such a beautiful trio from me and very likely have not published its equal in the last ten years.” This was a remarkable encomium from a man who regularly destroyed his manuscripts as unworthy. The first public performance of the C-major Trio took place in Frankfurt that winter (1882), with Brahms himself at the piano. The violinist Hugo Heermann and the cellist Valentin Müller completed the trio. This monument stands in Bad Ischl, Austria, as a tribute to Johannes Brahms, who spent twelve summers in that resort town, composing by day and enjoying the relaxed social life of a vacationer when his day’s work was done. The sweeping opening theme of the Trio is announced by the strings, who fairly sweep the piano into their drama. Even as the opening bars relax into a sweet, lyrical second theme, the piano begins to assert itself. Despite moments of introspection, the energy of the movement never abates, and it concludes with a coda in which the dramatic material of the opening returns to reinforce the strength of the ending. The Andante con moto comprises a beautiful theme and five variations, a form in which Brahms frequently demonstrated his ingenious creative imagination, whether in scores for piano alone or full orchestra. Here in this chamber ensemble, the main theme is powerful and the variations suitably substantial. The rhythmic figure of a sixteenth note followed by a dotted eighth note (a so-called “Scotch snap”), and its slower variant, the combination of a fast note followed by a slow note, play a prominent role. The Scherzo sends all three instruments scampering nervously about, with the piano particularly haunted by pursuing demons. The glorious Trio emerges briefly, triumphantly, only to be subsumed again by the mysterious fluttering that completes the movement the way it began. The piano continues with nervous flights in the opening of the final movement, setting up a cheerful, sunny Finale to the Trio. While pouring out a profusion of themes, Brahms lightens the drama that had infused the opening of the work. He teases with moments of tension, but as a whole, the music lives up to Brahms’s heading, Allegro giocoso, and concludes the whole business with C-major elan. 34 :: NOTES ON THE PROGRAM