Yannick Nézet-Séguin Conductor renaud Capuçon Violin ravel
Transcription
Yannick Nézet-Séguin Conductor renaud Capuçon Violin ravel
Program OnE HunDRED TwEnTiETH SEASOn Chicago Symphony orchestra riccardo muti Music Director Pierre Boulez Helen Regenstein Conductor Emeritus Yo-Yo ma Judson and Joyce Green Creative Consultant Global Sponsor of the CSO Thursday, January 13, 2011, at 8:00 Friday, January 14, 2011, at 1:30 Saturday, January 15, 2011, at 8:00 Sunday, January 16, 2011, at 3:00 Yannick Nézet-Séguin Conductor renaud Capuçon Violin ravel Valses nobles et sentimentales Modéré Assez lent Modéré Assez animée Presque lent Assez vif Moins vif Epilogue (Lent) Korngold Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 35 Moderato nobile Romance: Andante Finale: Allegro assai vivace REnAuD CAPuçOn INtermISSIoN tchaikovsky Symphony no. 6 in B Minor, Op. 74 (Pathétique) Adagio—Allegro non troppo Allegro con grazia Allegro molto vivace Finale: Adagio lamentoso The appearance of Yannick Nézet-Séguin is endowed in part by the Nuveen Investments Emerging Artist Fund. Steinway is the official piano of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. This program is partially supported by grants from the Illinois Arts Council, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts. 1 CommeNtS By PHiLLiP HuSCHER maurice ravel Born March 7, 1875, Ciboure, France. Died December 28, 1937, Paris, France. Valses nobles et sentimentales F ranz Schubert was the first important composer to write the word “waltz” on a score. By then— the early 1820s—waltzing had lived down its reputation as a scandalous demonstration of excessive speed and intimate physical contact on the dance floor. Schubert knew the waltz (from the German walzen, to turn about) as a charming social dance, more upbeat than the traditional ländler—although he knew it only from the safety of his piano stool, where he was spared romantic encounter, the hazards of severe nearsightedness (he kept his spectacles on even in bed), and the embarrassment of standing less than five feet tall in his dress shoes. From his seat at the piano, Schubert observed the life that eluded him. ComPoSed 1911, for piano; orchestrated in 1912 FIrSt PerFormaNCe May 9, 1911, piano version February 15, 1915, orchestral version FIrSt CSo PerFormaNCe november 12, 1920, Frederick Stock conducting 2 (He improvised waltzes throughout the wedding festivities of his dear friend Leopold Kupelweiser, letting no one else near the piano; by a fortuitous stroke of fate, one of the tunes remembered by the bride and passed down through her family was sung to Richard Strauss, who arranged it for piano in 1943.) In the last years of his pitifully brief life, Schubert published many of his waltzes, including the thirty-four Valses sentimentales and twelve Valses nobles that Maurice Ravel would play some seventy-five years later. Ravel had little in common with Schubert, aside from the slight stature that disqualified both of them from military service. Ravel had the social graces and the wardrobe to shine at parties, as well as the moSt reCeNt CSo PerFormaNCe December 5, 2006, Pierre Boulez conducting INStrumeNtatIoN two flutes, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, bass drum, side drum, cymbals, triangle, tambourine, glockenspiel, celesta, two harps, strings aPProxImate PerFormaNCe tIme 18 minutes CSo reCordINg 1957, Fritz Reiner conducting, RCA money to enjoy the fine life and to collect antiques, mechanical toys, and endless bric-a-brac. This same sensibility encouraged a passion for Viennese waltzes at an early age. In 1911, after Ravel discovered Schubert’s piano waltzes, he decided to write his own set of noble and sentimental waltzes, taking his cue from the title and classic simplicity of his predecessor’s pieces. He dedicated the score to the “delicious and ageless pleasure of a useless occupation.” The eight Valses nobles et sentimentales for piano were first performed in May 1911, at a “Concert sans noms d’auteurs,” a kind of concert quiz show not unlike Name That Tune, where audience members were asked to guess the composer of each piece on the program. Ravel’s Valses were variously attributed to Kodály, Satie, Chopin, and Gounod, among others, although apparently no one suggested Schubert. However, according to Ravel, “a minute majority” correctly identified his music. The following year, Ravel agreed to orchestrate the waltzes as a ballet score for which he supplied the title—Adelaide—and the scenario—a series of fleeting romantic encounters during a party in Adelaide’s Paris salon. Adelaide is no longer staged, but Ravel’s music, newly attired in shimmering orchestral colors, quickly found a home in concert halls. Symphony Center Information The use of still or video cameras and recording devices is prohibited in Orchestra Hall. Latecomers will be seated during designated program pauses. Please use perfume, cologne, and all other scented products sparingly, as many patrons are sensitive to fragrance. Please turn off or silence all personal electronic devices (pagers, watches, telephones, digital assistants). Please note that Symphony Center is a smoke-free environment. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated. Note: Fire exits are located on all levels and are for emergency use only. The lighted Exit sign nearest your seat is the shortest route outdoors. Please walk—do not run—to your exit and do not use elevators for emergency exit. Volunteer ushers provided by The Saints—Volunteers for the Performing Arts (www.saintschicago.org) 3 erich Wolfgang Korngold Born May 29, 1897, Brno, Czechoslovakia. Died November 29, 1957, Hollywood, California. Violin Concerto in d major, op. 35 I t could be argued that Erich Korngold was destined to compose music; certainly he was aided by a father who gave him Wolfgang as a middle name, and, as Vienna’s leading music critic, could ensure his son what no other composer in history could boast—one good review for each new work. Erich caused a sensation at an even younger age than the precocious Mendelssohn a century before. In 1907, at the age of ten, he played through his cantata, Gold, at the piano for Mahler, who called him a genius. His fame was secure at thirteen, when the Vienna Court Opera produced his ballet The Snowman. The Munich Court Opera produced ComPoSed 1945 FIrSt PerFormaNCe February 15, 1947, with Jascha Heifetz as soloist FIrSt CSo PerFormaNCe April 3, 1947; Jascha Heifetz, violin; Désiré Defauw conducting 4 two one-act operas he composed at sixteen. “One’s first reaction,” Richard Strauss later wrote, “upon learning that these compositions are by an adolescent boy, is of awe and fear . . . this firmness of style, mastery of form, individuality of expression and harmony, is truly amazing.” With the opera he composed at the age of twenty, Die tote Stadt (The dead city), which enjoyed extraordinary popularity throughout the 1920s, it appeared that, like Mozart or Mendelssohn, Korngold might actually sustain the remarkable success of his youth. Although Korngold’s status in the music world remained high—a Vienna newspaper poll moSt reCeNt CSo PerFormaNCe February 26, 1994; Orchestra Hall; Samuel Magad, violin; Mariss Jansons conducting trombone, timpani, cymbal, gong, bass drum, tubular bells, glockenspiel, xylophone, vibraphone, harp, celesta, strings June 28, 1997; Ravinia Festival; Gil Shaham, violin; Christoph Eschenbach conducting aPProxImate PerFormaNCe tIme 24 minutes INStrumeNtatIoN two flutes and piccolo, two oboes and english horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, CSo reCordINg A 1994 performance with Samuel Magad, violin, and Mariss Jansons conducting is included on From the Archives, vol. 21: Soloists of the Orchestra III. in 1932 ranked him and Arnold Schoenberg as the two greatest living composers!—his career did not turn out the way his early champions would have guessed. In October 1934, the director Max Reinhardt sent Korngold a telegram inviting him to Hollywood to adapt Mendelssohn’s incidental music for A Midsummer Night’s Dream for a new film version. Korngold accepted, and, although he planned to work there for six weeks, he signed on with Warner Brothers and ended up staying until May of 1935. (His first assignment was to write the music for Captain Blood, which made Errol Flynn a star.) Beginning that year, he divided his time between Los Angeles and Vienna, and then, with the Anschluss in 1938, he moved his family (including his parents and brother) to Hollywood. (He became a U.S. citizen in 1943.) Korngold’s film work was an unexpected departure from the Mozart- or Mendelssohn-like career for which he had seemed destined, but it brought him new fame. He won Academy awards for scoring Anthony Adverse and The Adventures of Robin Hood, and nominations for The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex and The Sea Hawk. His last film was Deception, with Bette Davis playing Beethoven’s Appassionata Sonata— Korngold himself was the pianist— and Paul Heinreid performing Korngold’s own cello concerto (actually played by Eleanor Aller, Leonard Slatkin’s mother). During his Hollywood years, Korngold devoted himself to writing for the movies. “It was as if he had taken a vow not to compose a single note outside the genre of film music for as long as the horror [World War II] was raging throughout the world,” his wife Luzi later suggested. As a result, he continually ignored requests from his friend, the distinguished violinist Bronislaw Huberman, for a concerto. In fact, he had sketched a violin concerto as early as 1937, but stopped work when a violinist friend told him the solo part was too demanding. Finally, in 1945, when Huberman asked one more time, Korngold “immediately stood up, went to the piano and played a theme,” according to Luzi, that would turn out to be one of the main tunes in the concerto he had long refused to compose. Korngold immediately retrieved his old sketches and his Violin Concerto was completed before the end of the year. It marked Korngold’s return to composing for the concert hall rather than the movie theater. As it Jascha Heifetz turned out, it was Jascha Heifetz, not Huberman, who gave the premiere of Korngold’s new concerto, became its first champion, and recorded it in 1953. “In spite of the demand for virtuosity in 5 the finale,” Korngold wrote, “the work with its many melodic and lyric episodes was contemplated rather for a Caruso than for a Paganini.” In Heifetz, the composer Alma Mahler continued, he had found both Caruso and Paganini in one person. The concerto is the first concert work of Korngold’s to put his film music to new use. The dramatic, eloquent opening theme was 6 recycled from Another Dawn, a movie Warner Brothers made, according to the composer’s son, simply because they didn’t want to waste the “elaborate and expensive standing sets” from The Charge of the Light Brigade. A second lyrical theme is borrowed from Juarez. The elegant second movement, titled Romance, takes its main material from the Frederick March–Olivia de Haviland movie Anthony Adverse. The dazzling finale includes music from The Prince and the Pauper. Korngold dedicated the score to someone who provided a significant link with his far-away beginnings—Alma Mahler-Werfel, who had been an admirer since his prodigy days in Vienna and had kept in close contact throughout his Hollywood years. Piotr tchaikovsky Born May 7, 1840, Votkinsk, Russia. Died November 6, 1893, Saint Petersburg, Russia. Symphony No. 6 in B minor, op. 74 (Pathétique) F ive days after he conducted the premiere of this symphony, Tchaikovsky drank a glass of unboiled water, a careless move that year in Saint Petersburg, where countless cases of cholera had recently been reported. He died four days later. When the symphony was performed for a second time the following week, the hall was draped in black and a bust modeled after the composer’s death mask was prominently displayed. An eleven-year-old boy, who would soon become Russia’s most celebrated composer, attended that concert with his father, the great baritone Fyodor Stravinsky. Little Igor, whose own music would eventually refute much ComPoSed February–August 1893 FIrSt PerFormaNCe October 28, 1893, the composer conducting FIrSt CSo PerFormaNCe April 27, 1894; Auditorium Theatre; Theodore Thomas conducting of what Tchaikovsky’s glorified, understood, even at the time, the magnitude of this loss—not just to his family (his father was famous for his interpretations of several Tchaikovsky roles) but to the larger music world as well. At the time he died, Tchaikovsky was one of the great figures in music: he was at the peak of his creative powers, and he was both famous and beloved far beyond his native Russia. His death came as a shock (he was only fifty-three) and the suspicious circumstances surrounding his fatal illness, coupled with the tragic tone of his last symphony—curiously titled Pathétique—produced a mystique about the composer’s last days moSt reCeNt CSo PerFormaNCe September 21, 2007; Riccardo Muti conducting INStrumeNtatIoN three flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones and tuba, timpani, bass drum, cymbals, tam-tam, strings aPProxImate PerFormaNCe tIme 45 minutes CSo reCordINgS 1952, Rafael Kubelik conducting, Mercury 1957, Fritz Reiner conducting, RCA 1976, Sir Georg Solti conducting, London 1984, James Levine conducting, RCA 1986, Claudio Abbado conducting, CBS 1998, Daniel Barenboim conducting, Teldec 7 that still persists today. In 1979, the Russian émigré musicologist Alexandra Orlova published a nowinfamous article proposing that Tchaikovsky had in fact committed suicide by poison, on the orders of his fellow alumni of the School of Jurisprudence, to cover up his alleged affair with the nephew of Duke Stenbock-Thurmor. For a time in the 1980s, suicide and homosexuality replaced the quaint old tale of cholera and drinking water, and, as Tchaikovsky’s obituary was rewritten, the Pathétique Symphony became the chief musical victim in this tabloid tale. Even Tchaikovsky with his nephew and heir, Bob Davydov, pictured in 1892 Tchaikovsky’s biographer David Brown, writing in the sacrosanct Grove, accepted Orlova’s theory. But in recent years, scholars have 8 wisely backed off—evidence is almost totally undocumented—and a number of musicologists, including the biographer Alexander Poznansky, have refuted Orlova convincingly. The circumstances surrounding the composition of the Pathétique Symphony are dramatic and mysterious, if less lurid than pulp fiction. In December 1892, Tchaikovsky abruptly decided to abandon work on a programmatic symphony in E-flat major on which he had been struggling for some time—“an irreversible decision,” he wrote, “and it is wonderful that I made it.” (He eventually turned portions of the abandoned symphony into his third piano concerto, which the Chicago Symphony played for the first time in December.) But the failure of the new symphony left Tchaikovsky despondent and directionless, and he began to fear that he was “played out, dried up,” as he put it. (“I think and I think, and I know not what to do,” he wrote to his nephew Bob Davydov, whose friendship and encouragement would help see him through this crisis.) Although he felt that he should give up writing “pure music, that is, symphonic or chamber music,” within two months he had begun the symphony that would prove to be his greatest—and his last. Renewed—and relieved—by the old, familiar joy of composing, Tchaikovsky wrote frantically. Within four days, the first part of the symphony was complete and the remainder precisely outlined in his head. “You cannot imagine what bliss I feel,” he wrote to Bob on February 11, 1893, “assured that my time has not yet passed and that I can still work.” The rest went smoothly and the symphony was completed, without setbacks, by the end of August. Tchaikovsky conducted the premiere of his new symphony on October 16 in Saint Petersburg. The audience—“all Saint Petersburg”—rose and cheered when the composer appeared on stage. But after the symphony, the applause was half-hearted; the crowd didn’t know what to make of this sober, gloomy music. Leaving the concert hall, Tchaikovsky complained that neither the audience nor the orchestra seemed to like the piece, although two days later he decided that “it is not that it wasn’t liked, but it has caused some bewilderment.” The morning after the premiere, the composer told his brother Modest that the symphony needed a title. (Tchaikovsky had originally thought of calling it the Program Symphony.) Modest first suggested Tragic and then Pathétique, which in Russian carries a meaning closer to passionate, full of emotion and suffering. Tchaikovsky agreed at once, and in his brother’s presence wrote on the first page the title that “remained forever,” as Modest later recalled, although the composer himself soon had second thoughts. (Tchaikovsky’s publisher, who knew the marketing value of a good title, ignored the composer’s urgent request that it simply be printed as Symphony no. 6.) Like the abandoned E-flat major symphony, the new B minor score was programmatic, but, as he wrote to Bob, “with such a program that will remain a mystery to everyone—let them guess.” Bob was only the first to ponder, in vain, the meaning of this deeply personal work. (And even he, to whom Tchaikovsky would ultimately dedicate the score, couldn’t draw a satisfactory answer from the composer except that it was “imbued with subjectivity.”) Tchaikovsky carried his program with him to the grave. Cryptic notes scribbled among his sketches at the time refer to a symphony about life’s aspirations and disappointments—yet another manifestation of the central theme of both Swan Lake and Eugene Onegin, and in fact the great theme of the composer’s life: the painful search for an ideal that is never satisfied. As scholars have learned more about Tchaikovsky’s unfulfilled homoerotic passion for his nephew Bob—a mismatch of youth and middle age, and a tangle of sexual persuasions in a society fiercely intolerant of homosexuality—the temptation to read this symphony as the composer’s heartbreaking confession of a painful, repressed life has inevitably proved irresistible. In the inexhaustibly expressive, but sufficiently ambiguous language of music, Tchaikovsky could tell the story of his life—honestly and unsparingly—without ever giving up its secrets. The abstract nature of music has, arguably, never been so fearlessly tested. The temptation to read something tragic into this score is as old as the music itself. Even the 9 composer, who didn’t want to divulge his meaning, admitted before the premiere that it had something of the character of a requiem. (The trombone incantations in the first movement actually quote a Russian Orthodox chant for the dead.) And surely the first audience was stunned—or bewildered, as Tchaikovsky noted—by the unconventionally slow and mournful finale, trailing off into silence at the end, with just cellos and basses playing pppp. When Tchaikovsky died so suddenly and violently on the heels of the premiere, the symphony became identified at once, perhaps inextricably, with its composer’s death. By the memorial performance on November 6, the Russian Musical Gazette had already determined that the symphony was “indeed a sort of swan song, a presentiment of imminent death.” (More than a century later, Orlova’s devotees were to make much of the slowly fading final pages as a depiction of suicide.) © 2011 Chicago Symphony Orchestra T 10 he score itself, though perhaps dulled by familiarity, is one of Tchaikovsky’s most inspired creations. All of its true masterstrokes are purely musical, not programmatic. It begins uniquely, with the sound of a very low bassoon solo over murky strings. (This slow introduction is in the “wrong” key, but eventually works its way into B minor.) The entire first movement sustains the tone, although not the tempo, of the somber opening. The soaring principal theme, to be played “tenderly, very songfully, and elastically,” is one of Tchaikovsky’s greatest melodies. (Tchaikovsky carefully directs the emotional development of this rich and expansive tune all the way down to a virtually unprecedented thread of sound, marked pppppp.) The recapitulation reorders and telescopes events so that the grand and expressive melody, now magically rescored, steals in suddenly and unexpectedly, to great effect. The central movements are, by necessity, more relaxed. The first is a wonderful, singing, undanceable waltz, famously set in 5/4 time. (There’s a real waltz, in 3/4, in Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony.) The second is a brilliant, dazzlingly scored march, undercut throughout by a streak of melancholy. The finale begins with a cry of despair, and although it eventually unveils a warm and consoling theme begun by the violins against the heartbeat of a horn ostinato, the mood only continues to darken, ultimately becoming threatening in its intensity. In a symphony marked by telling, uncommonly quiet gestures—and this from a composer famous for bombast—a single soft stroke of the tam-tam marks the point of no return. From there it is all defeat and disintegration, over a fading, ultimately faltering pulse. Phillip Huscher is the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.