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Program Notes - April 22, 2001
Fantasy and Fugue in C-Minor,
BWV 537
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 -1750)
(Orchestrated by Sir Edward Elgar)
If music
were architecture, Bachs big organ works would be cathedrals, fortresses, Baronial
manors. More than any of his other
compositions, these works give the inescapable feeling that one is viewing a physical
structure. Every part is linked together, so
that the whole thing stands immensely upright. Yet
there is the distinct feeling that every singly line must be there if something were missing, the structure would
fall apart. If this Fantasia and Fugue
were truly physical architecture, it might be the country estate of a gentleman. It would
be a place where enjoyment and pageantry were as important as nobility and seriousness of
purpose, where elegance and wealth stood side-by-side with the natural beauty of the
forest.
There
are probably more orchestral transcriptions of Bachs organ works than any other
class of music. Dozens of conductors and many
major composers have tested their musical skills by trying to express Bachs unique
genius in a setting that would show off the modern symphony orchestra. The music itself is so identifiably Bach that
these transcriptions never seem to be reflect their transcriber, but always the ideas of
Bach himself. One of the most
satisfying transcriptions is of one of Bachs less familiar organ works, this Fantasia
and Fugue.
Most
Americans would have difficulty naming ten English composers, even given as a starting
point G. F. Handel, and Gilbert and Sullivan (only one of this pair counts as a
composer!). Surely one name who would be on
the list, however, is Edward Elgar possibly the most quintessential of English composers. His stately march Land of Hope and Glory from the Pomp
and Circumstance marches is played at practically every graduation ceremony and might
be the most recognizable bit of classical music from England other than the Hallelujah
Chorus from Handels Messiah. Few,
however, are familiar with his other pieces which include two major concerti, two
symphonies (and a third unfinished one), several major oratorios, and a fair number of
transcriptions.
His
style in these major works practically defines the music of Edwardian England, and heavily
influenced his generation of British composers. Elgar
brings the same stylistic approach to this transcription, and it displays very much the
same orchestral sound. But the source of the
music remains unmistakable: Bach, whose genius was perhaps the most influential ever to
arise in western music.
The
Engulfed Cathedral
Claude Debussy (1862 - 1918)
(Orchestrated by Leopold Stokowski)
Claude Debussy is the earliest composer to be described as impressionist, even though a large number of others were beginning to move in the same direction at the time. He enrolled at the Paris Conservatory, hoping for a virtuoso career as a pianist, but found that his true interests and talents lay in composing rather than performing. At graduation he won the coveted Prix de Rome, but the two-year stay was a disaster, producing no compositions in what would evolve into his mature style.
The
young Debussy was a true Bohemian rebellious against authority, living in poverty, and considering his muse
the only true goal worth pursuing. His
musical ideas were revolutionary, and he was fond of outrageous overstatement. His comments on codified principles of
orchestration: themes suggest their musical coloring. On opera: the ideal music drama would be two
associated dreams. On rhythm: rhythm cannot be contained in bars (referring to the bar-lines of musical
measures, considered absolutely essential for annotating rhythms). He frequently and publicly complained about the tyranny of the bar line.
The
Engulfed Cathedral was originally written as one of a set of Piano Preludes,
part of his first collection of absolute gems for the keyboard. It is a late work, with the composer in absolute
command of his abilities. The dozen or so
preludes published in these two books represent an incredible variety of musical
impressions. The title La Cathedrale
Engloutie translates literally as the Engulfed Cathedral, but might better be considered
as the enshrouded cathedral. The
original piano work contains performance markings which indicate the visual impressions he
wanted: in a gently harmonious haze, gentle and fluid, and
emerging from the haze gradually. Although
this orchestral transcription (by Leopold Stokowski, long-time conductor of the
Philadelphia Orchestra) presents its images via a completely different set of sounds, it
preserves the mystery of Debussys piano setting.
The
subject of this impressionist gem is the legend of the cathedral of a mighty city (the
legendary city of Ys, from which Paris
which might be translated equal to Ys perhaps derived its name?) The inhabitants of the city had built a mighty and
splendiferous cathedral to honor their new Christian god. However, they continued to pay homage to their previous pagan deities, and
gradually ignored Him for whom they had built the beautiful edifice, bringing upon
themselves a natural catastrophe that submerged the entire city beneath the sea. (The legend of Atlantis?) However, the true God took pity upon his few
virtuous subjects who had continued to believe in him and decreed that once every century,
on the anniversary of the citys destruction, the cathedral would emerge from the sea
for one day, then return to its watery shroud.
The
Engulfed Cathedral represents that day. It
begins with
the mists of the evening fog covering the water. At
the stroke of midnight, the mists begin to clear and the cathedral to rise. (In the original piano prelude, the chimes are
clearly represented by twelve consecutive strokes of the high treble note E,
spread over several measures. In
Stokowskis orchestration, the same notes are present but they are spread among the
violins, harp and celesta, and are not quite so distinguishable.) Gradually, the points of the steeple spires begin
to appear above the water (represented by a theme played initially by French horns, then
joined by the rest of the orchestra).
The
music grows in intensity as the cathedral rises, until its stands gleaming in the light of
the sun. At the peak of the days
intensity, the cathedrals own chimes can be heard pealing out (a three-note theme in
the horns, which also more obviously represents the sound of chimes in the original piano
version). After its centennial moment in the
sun, the mighty building sinks once again beneath the waters as the day comes to a close
and night softly returns. This orchestral
version captures all of the magic in that original impressionist gem by a composer who
once described his piano preludes as conversations between my piano and
myself.
Piano Concerto no. 2 in G-Minor, op. 22
Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921)
Late in the nineteenth century, the established composers in French musical circles were quite conservative, and one of the most influential of these was Camille Saint-Saëns. He had not always been so conservative, however. In his earliest days, in fact, he was a bit of a radical. He defended the musical languages of Wagner and Schumann against attacks by the establishment of his own youth, which was probably even more conservative than he would become later in life.
Like
so many other composers, Saint-Saëns was a prodigy. He gave his debut as a pianist at age ten with a public performance of
Mozart and Beethoven. Afterward, he offered
to play as an encore any Beethoven sonata randomly selected by his audience from
memory! Simply playing a Beethoven sonata was
no mean feat for a ten year old, but memorizing all of them was a stunning achievement. He won admission to the Paris Conservatory at age
13, and three years later won a First Prize in organ performance.
While
in the conservatory he completed two symphonies that were never published, as well as his
first published Symphony no. 1, op. 2. He
was so well respected by the faculty that it is a bit surprising that he was never awarded
the Prix de Rome. Music came so naturally to
him that he once said of himself that he wrote music, as an apple tree produces
apples. Berlioz admired his genius, but
once made the enigmatic comment about Saint-Saens: He
knows everything, but lacks inexperience, possibly referring to a lack of primitive
inspiration in his technically perfect works. His
musical materials are generally of a square construction in both rhythm and
melodic intervals, rather than free and rhapsodic.
Saint-Saëns celebrated feuds with
Debussy leave modern audiences believing that his music was somehow lacking and unworthy. Nothing could be further from the truth. His compositions are always masterfully crafted,
and frequently used highly imaginative devices to achieve what otherwise sounds rather
straightforward and orthodox. The Second
Piano Concerto is a perfect example of this. It
was written relatively early in his career, more than a decade before his greatest
orchestral works.
Although it comprises three movements,
standard at that time for a concerto, it avoids the fast-slow-fast structure
so common at the time. Rather, it begins
with the slow movement which is by far the most dramatic, as well as the longest. Further, it dispenses with the standard orchestral
introduction, opening instead with a dramatic monologue by the piano. This is echoed by a very short, but equally
dramatic orchestral statement leading to the pianos first major theme. Derived from the opening materials, this theme is
sweet, pure and simple. It will appear over
and over throughout the movement, sometimes elegant, sometimes powerful but always itself.
The second movement is a dance-like scherzo, a delightful contrast to the serious demeanor
of the first. The finale is a
virtuoso showpiece, worthy of Saint-Saëns own talents, and never fails to bring the
audience to its feet.
Pictures at an Exhibition
Modest Mussorgsky (1839-1881)
(Orchestrated by Maurice Ravel)
Modest Mussorgsky, the youngest son of a wealthy landowner, was a genius prodigy whose chaotic and unstable life prevented him from ever reaching his full potential as a composer. In his younger days, he learned only performing skills, but his creative spirit eventually drove him to musical composition as an outlet. At age eighteen, though he had just embarked on a military career, he talked Mily Balakirev into teaching him the minimum essentials of musical structure that he needed to compose.
Unfortunately,
he never mastered the techniques of musical craftsmanship required to finish off his
orchestral compositions. In fact, most of his
works (other than songs and solo piano pieces) were left uncompleted at his death, and
were put into performing editions by other composers. His close friend, Rimsky-Korsakov considered him to be technically
clumsy in harmonic structure, counterpoint and orchestration. Nevertheless, he identified Mussorgsky as a true
creative genius, and edited many of his works to clean up the mistakes. As a result, many of Mussorgskys works
sound more like Korsakov than himself.
However,
Pictures at an Exhibition has become probably the most frequently orchestrated
piano work in all of classical music. Rather
than do it himself, Korsakov gave the task to one of his students, Mikhail Tushmalov, who
produced an eminently forgettable version shortly after Korsakovs piano edition. Since that time, though, more than two dozen
composers, arrangers and musical scholars (and who knows how many music students, as
homework assignments) have tackled the work. A
few years ago, the American conductor Leonard Slatkin put together a pastiche involving
excerpts from more than a dozen orchestrations (none by himself!), which he conducted with
many of the worlds most famous orchestras. No
matter who had orchestrated the individual movements, though, it was Mussorgskys
musical genius that shown through.
By
far the most famous and frequently performed version is that by the French impressionist
composer Maurice Ravel. His colorful and
imaginative use of orchestral sounds and colors, is completely un-Russian. However, it has become so much the performing
standard that most listeners think of this work as the definitive version. It sounds nothing like Mussorgskys
orchestral style, but displays Ravels brilliance.
Mussorgskys
original inspiration was a memorial exhibition of watercolors and architectural drawings
by his friend Victor Hartmann. The various
sections portray in music the feelings engendered by several of these pictures, and the
overall work is structured as a stroll through the gallery at which they are exhibited. The music opens with a famous theme, subtitled Promenade,
which reappears at intervals as the viewer walks from one picture to the next. Rather than a simple repetition of the theme,
however, the character of the Promenade changes ... reflecting the mood engendered by the
picture the viewer has just studied and
departed from.
The
first picture, Gnomus, depicts a childs plaything. Although in the style of the famous Nutcracker, it is a grotesque troll-like
being rather than a princely soldier. The
second picture, The Old Castle, depicts an ancient fortress, with a troubadour
standing before the gate. Here appears one
of the most un-Russian orchestral colors of the piece, for Ravel gave the balladeers
serenade to the alto saxophone which
would never have been used in a Russion
orchestra of Mussorgskys era.
Promenade
music then leads the listener to an illustration of the Garden of the Tuilleries in
Paris, full of children playing and quarreling. The
next movement, Bydlo (the Polish word for cattle), depicts an oxcart with enormous
wooden wheels. The music is a powerful and
ponderous as the massive beasts of burden drawing the cart. More promenade music conveys us to a portrayal of a phantasmagoric dance
scene from a forgotten ballet, in which children dances as canaries with their feet and
heads sticking out from otherwise-intact eggshells: the Ballet of Chicks in Their
Shells. The ballet was actually produced
in St. Petersburg several years before Hartmanns drawing. Next comes a portrait of two Polish Jews, One
Rich and One Poor (Ravels version names them as Samuel Goldenburg and Schmuyle,
names invented by Mussorgskys friend and biographer Victor Stasov). Goldenburg is rich, prosperous, pompous and
arrogant, while Schmuyle is whining and peripatetic. There is no difficulty telling what music represents which man!
Once
again, the promenade leads us on, this time to The Marketplace at Limoges. Mussorgsky himself jotted notes in his manuscript
about colorful imagined conversations between patrons: ... Mme de Roursac has just acquired a beautiful new set of teeth,
while M. de Panteleons nose, which is in his way, is ever the color of a
peony. Directly, the music plunges the
listener into the Catacombs, this time the catacombs in Paris rather than the more
famous ones in Rome. The music alternates
between stark, bold, powerful chords representing the incipient terror of standing alone
in an ancient sepulchre and a ghostly, mysterious evocation of the dead souls, titled With
the Dead in a Dead Language. The final
appearance of the Promenade shows the visitor walking toward the next picture, stunned
from his most recent experience.
The
penultimate picture, a clock in the shape of a hut with the legs of a chicken, is titled The
Hut on Fowls Legs. It represents
the dwelling of Baba Yaga, a Russian witch
frequently summoned to scare young children in the manner of the Western bogeyman. It leads directly to the most famous picture of
all The Great Gate of Kiev. Hartmanns
architectural drawing, for a monument that was never built, falls considerably short of
Mussorgskys powerful depiction. This
movement, which included some of his most powerful music, is a fitting end to what has
become the single work by which this Russian genius is best known, although it took the
efforts of many orchestrators to achieve for him this well deserved renown.
Program
Notes by C. Michael Kelly
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