George Frideric Handel was one of the greatest composers of the Baroque era. The
Water Music is a collection of orchestral movements, often considered as three suites,
composed by George Frideric Handel. It premiered in the summer on July 17, 1717
when King George I requested a concert on the River Thames.The concert was performed
by 50 musicians playing on a barge close to the royal barge from which the King
listened with some close friends.
The score of this Concerto is inscribed "Amsterdam-Geneve, 1949" and the three movements
were completed respectively on 29 March, 2 June, and 9 Auguts that year.
Martin wrote the work for the Orchestra of the Bern Musikgesellchaft, which gave
the first performance on 25 October 1949, Luc Balmer conducting.
The solo instruments are flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, trumpet, trombone,
and timpani. The percussion in the score consists of cymbals, snare drum, and bass
drum.
The Symphony No. 103 in E-flat major, Hoboken 1/103, is the eleventh of the twelve
so-called London Symphonies written by Joseph Haydn. This symphony is nicknamed
"The Drumroll", after the long roll on the timpani with which it begins.
The symphony was the last but one of twelve that were composed for performance in
England during Haydn's two journeys there (1791–1792, 1794–1795). Haydn's music
was well known in England well before the composer ever traveled there, and members
of the British musical public had long expressed the wish that Haydn would visit.
The composer's reception in England was in fact very enthusiastic, and the English
visits were one of the most fruitful and happy periods of the composer's life. Haydn
composed the "Drumroll" Symphony while living in London during the winter of 1794–1795.
The "Drumroll" Symphony was premiered on March 2, 1795 as part of a concert series
called the "Opera Concerts", at the King's Theatre. The orchestra was unusually
large for the time, consisting of about 60 players. The task of directing the work
was divided between the concertmaster Viotti and Haydn, who sat at a fortepiano.
The premiere was evidently a success, and the Morning Chronicle's reviewer wrote:
Another new Overture [i.e., symphony], by the fertile and enchanting Haydn, was
performed; which, as usual, had continual strokes of genius, both in air and harmony.
The Introduction excited deepest attention, the Allegro charmed, the Andante was
encored, the Minuets, especially the trio, were playful and sweet, and the last
movement was equal, if not superior to the preceding.
Pamela Martin Conducting
For our second program we present two delightful works by the great Viennese composer
Franz Schubert (1797-1828). We begin with his charming Overture in D major, subtitled
“In the Italian Style” (not by Schubert) because of its deliberate similarity to
the overtures of Rossini, who was all the rage in the Vienna of 1817. Guest conductor
Pamela Martin will conduct the overture. Schubert’s lively symphony No. 3 in D major
closes the program as we continue our examination of his early symphonies.
Soloist Christina Mok, violin
In between we present Schubert’s favorite composer of the past, Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart, with his final concerto for violin No. 5 in A major K.219 sometimes called
the “Turkish”. Mozart was an excellent violinist and may have written his concerti
for his own performances as concertmaster of the Salzburg orchestra. Our soloist
in these performances is the outstanding Bay Area violinist Christina Mok.
The symphony was completed in 1787. It is one of Haydn's best-known works, even
though it is not one of the Paris or London Symphonies and does not have a descriptive
nickname.
The work is in standard four movement form and scored for flute, two oboes, two
bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, continuo (harpsichord) and strings.
The first movement begins with a brief introduction which quickly settles to the
dominant chord to prepare for the main body of the movement. The strings open the
Allegro stating the main theme and the rest of the movement develops from there,
with almost every statement deriving from a previous idea. The exposition is monothematic
and the development continues to make use of that single melodic idea. In the recapitualation,
the initial statement of the theme is embellished by a solo flute.
The slow movement in D major consists mainly of embellishments of the legato oboe
theme which opens it, though every so often is punctuated by chords played by the
whole orchestra. After hearing this slow movement, Johannes Brahms is said to have
remarked, 'I want my Ninth Symphony to sound like this'. It is the first of Haydn's
symphonies to use trumpets and timpani in the slow movement. Mozart had previously
used trumpets and timpani in the slow movement of his Linz Symphony.
The minuet is in G major. The trio has an unusual feature to it: after stating a
rather simple theme, the fifths held in the bassoons and violas shift down a fourth
in parallel, an effect typically avoided by the classical composers.
The finale is a sonata-rondo, with the rondo theme first presented in binary form.
The first section of this is noteworthy for ending on unusual cadence on the mediant.
A "perpetual-motion finale," it is considered one of the most cheerful Haydn ever
wrote.
Maestro Ramadanoff and MSCO are joined for these performances by four outstanding
soloists and the choirs Viva la Musica and the Chancel Choir of Los Altos United
Methodist Church prepared by their director Shulamit Hoffman.
In 1807 Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) accepted a commission from Prince Nicholas
Esterhazy to compose a mass in honor of the nameday of the Prince’s wife as Beethoven’s
teacher Josef Haydn had done when he was in the prince’s service.
In composing his first mass Beethoven clearly respected his teacher’s late masses,
and the result was a work of enormous beauty and reverence combined with moments
of drama.
we begin with Carl Maria von Weber’s beautiful overture to his final opera Oberon,
which begins the magical call from Oberon’s horn and leads to an exciting musical
adventure
Weber conducted the premiere of his opera Oberon in London on April 12, 1826, three
days after completing the score. Hans Kindler conducted the National Symphony Orchestra's
first performance of the Overture, on October 30, 1932.
The score calls for flutes, oboes, clarinets and bassoons in pairs, 4 horns, 2 trumpets,
3 trombones, timpani, and strings.
Franck’s work begins with a dramatic introduction that leads to a joyful conclusion.
He began work in the summer of 1885, and completed it on December 12. In his ultimate,
old master phase, Franck transformed everything he touched.
The strings open with a menacing dotted figure in unison, answered by the piano
with a plaintively drooping phrase whose dialogue gives way to a second theme introduced
by pizzicato woodwinds and strings. An appasionato development leads shortly to
six seamless variations on the second theme through which the piano decorates, comments,
alludes, and accompanies, as the mood shifts from triumphant assertion to mystical
absorption and languishing, muted sighs. A sudden trill in both hands, two octaves
apart, prompts the orchestra to begin the extensive, rhapsodic finale in which the
thematic material of the preceding is wrought to an incandescent apotheosis. Without
doubt, the irresistible, surefire breeziness of this finish has insured the Variations
symphoniques first place in popularity among Franck's works.
The Burleske in D minor for piano and orchestra (sometimes seen as Burlesque) was
written by Richard Strauss in 1885-86, when he was 21. Its original title was Scherzo
in D minor, and it was written for Hans von Bülow, who had appointed Strauss assistant
conductor of the Meiningen Orchestra.
Strauss’s rambunctious and virtuosic Burleske fully lives up to its name after beginning
with a lively duet between piano and timpani. The piano then enters in a state of
high excitement. A second, more lyrical Brahmsian theme, emerges, and this is followed
by waltz-like measures not unlike the waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier. The work ends
quietly, again on the timpani. The piece takes about 22 minutes to perform.
Our program concludes with MSCO’s first performance at these concerts of the original
“victory” symphony, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 in C minor. The drama begins with
the famous ta-ta-ta-TA motif at the beginning, and takes us through a wonderful
range of moods and musical ideas before the triumphant conclusion that caused Beethoven
to enlarge the orchestra by adding trombones in a symphony for the first time.
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