Seasoned American symphony-goers would probably find it easy to rattle off the names

Similar documents
LISTENING GUIDE. p) serve to increase the intensity and drive. The overall effect is one of great power and compression.

If the classical music world ever had a Renaissance Man, Leonard Bernstein was it. He

Western Classical Tradition. The concerto

Exam 2 MUS 101 (CSUDH) MUS4 (Chaffey) Dr. Mann Spring 2018 KEY

Concert of Tuesday, April 2, 2014, at 8:00p. Donald Runnicles, conductor. Yo-Yo Ma, cello. Edward Elgar ( )

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Introduction to Music

GREAT STRING QUARTETS

Edward Elgar Life Dates: Nationality: English Period: Late Romantic

OCR GCSE (9-1) MUSIC TOPIC EXPLORATION PACK - THE CONCERTO THROUGH TIME

The Baroque Period: A.D

Introduction to Music

Easy Classical Cello Solos: Featuring Music Of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Tchaikovsky And Others. By Javier Marcó READ ONLINE

The Classical Period (1825)

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Romantic Era Practice Test

Audition Information. Audition Repertoire

Jury Examination Requirements

Virginia resident Adolphus Hailstork received his doctorate in composition from

of musical means, and conduct it toward a solution that corresponds apprehensively to that of

Excerpts. Violin. Group A. Beethoven Symphony No. 3 Eroica 3rd Movement: Beginning to 2nd Ending

Peoria Symphony Orchestra Program Notes September 22, 2018 Michael Allsen

Chamber Music Traced through history.

Joshua Salvatore Dema Graduate Recital

Level performance examination descriptions

Orchestra Audition Information and Excerpts

Trumpets. Clarinets Bassoons

The Classical Period

Music: An Appreciation, Brief Edition Edition: 8, 2015

The Classical Period-Notes

All Strings: Any movement from a standard concerto or a movement, other than the first, of a Bach sonata or suite, PLUS

Music in the Baroque Period ( )

University of West Florida Department of Music Levels of Attainment piano

Music 111: Music Appreciation 1

Violoncello recital. FIU Digital Commons. Florida International University. Saulo Moura de Almeida Florida International University

A Deeply Moving Choral Work Module 15 of Music: Under the Hood

How to Write about Music: Vocabulary, Usages, and Conventions

GRADUATE AUDITION REQUIREMENTS

SPECIALISATION in Master of Music Professional performance with specialisation (4 terms, CP)

GRADUATE PLACEMENT EXAMINATIONS - COMPOSITION

MUSIC FOR THE PIANO SESSION FOUR: THE PIANO IN VICTORIAN SOCIETY,

Graduate Violin Recital. Jueun Kim Warf SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE: Dr. Janna Lower, CHAIR. Dr. Steve Thomas, CO-CHAIR

Easy Classical Flute Solos: Featuring Music Of Bach, Beethoven, Wagner, Handel And Other Composers By Javier Marcó READ ONLINE

13 Name. Grout, Chapter 17 Solo, Chamber, and Vocal Music in the Nineteenth Century. 10. What solution was found?

something of a child prodigy. At the age of ten, he played his cantata Gold for Gustav Mahler,

NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE

If you ve seen the play or movie Amadeus, forget everything you learned about Antonio

Audition Guidelines & Repertoire Lists Season

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Programme Notes Online

BSO Season 2018/19. Concerts and pre-concert events for students studying GCSE and A level Music

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Thursday, February 15, :00 p.m. Konrad Kowal. Junior Recital. DePaul Recital Hall 804 West Belden Avenue Chicago

Requirements for the aptitude tests at the Folkwang University of the Arts

Audition Requirements: Pre-College Division (Grades 8-12)

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE

Huntsville Youth Orchestra Auditions. Huntsville Youth Symphony VIOLIN

GRADUATE AUDITION REQUIREMENTS

7:43 7:50 Development of theme A strings (sequence of A in low strings) with woodwind interjection

Chapter 10. Instrumental Music Sunday, October 21, 12

Analysis Worksheet Fauré Elegy

3 Characteristic Pieces, Op.10 (Mazurka (No.1)): Bassoon 1 And 2 Parts (Qty 2 Each) [A5583] By Edward Elgar READ ONLINE

LISZT: Totentanz and Fantasy on Hungarian Folk Tunes for Piano and Orchestra: in Full Score. 96pp. 9 x 12. (Worldwide). $14.95.

CONTENTS: Peter and the Wolf 3. Sergey Prokofiev 5. Consider This: Class Activities 6. Musical Terms 7. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra 8

Music Appreciation Spring 2005 Music Test: Music, An Appreciation, Fourth Brief Edition by Roger Kamien (with CD s)

Postgraduate pre-admission and audition requirements

La Salle University MUS 150 Art of Listening Final Exam Name

Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide

Script for NYP 16-30: Ax/Brahms (INSERT NATIONAL UNDERWRITING CREDIT #1) (THEME MUSIC UP AND UNDER TO "X") AB: And this week...

Session Three NEGLECTED COMPOSER AND GENRE: SCHUBERT SONGS October 1, 2015

Dvořák Symphony No. 8 PRESENTATION BY DANIEL SMITH

1. Attend three (3) concerts, a report to be written for each. See web sites listed in the syllabus for current list of concerts and recitals.

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

rhinegold education: subject to endorsement by ocr Mozart: Clarinet Concerto in A, K. 622, first movement Context Scores AS PRESCRIBED WORK 2017

Classical Time Period

Beethoven (Early Romantic Composers)

=Causeway Performing Arts= GCSE Music AoS 2: Shared Music (vol.3) CLASSICAL CONCERTO. in conjunction with

Example 1. Beethoven, Piano Sonata No. 9 in E major, Op. 14, No. 1, second movement, p. 249, CD 4/Track 6

Chapter 13. Key Terms. The Symphony. II Slow Movement. I Opening Movement. Movements of the Symphony. The Symphony

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

LAMONT SCHOOL OF MUSIC

Music 001 Introduction to Music. Section CT3RA: T/Th 12:15-1:30 pm Section 1T3RA: T/Th 1:40-2:55 pm

COURSE OUTLINE MUS103

Date: Wednesday, 8 October :00AM

Elements of Music. How can we tell music from other sounds?

Program Notes for KIDS

University of Arkansas-Monticello Division of Music Fall MUS 1113 Music Appreciation Online Syllabus

ARCT History. Practice Paper 1

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

NEW HAMPSHIRE TECHNICAL INSTITUTE. After successfully completing the course, the student will be able to:

Kindergarten: Peer Gynt- Grieg Babes in Toyland- Herbert The King and I- Rodgers Carnival of the Animals- Saint Säens. 1 st Grade

Concerto No. 2 for Piano and Orchestra in C minor, Opus 18 (1901)

The tempo MUSICAL APPRECIATIONS MUSICAL APPRECIATION SHEET 1. slow. Can you hear which is which? Write a tick ( ) in the PIECES OF MUSIC

Brahms Piano Quintet in F minor - 3 rd Movement (For Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

Ludwig van Beethoven

MUSIC HISTORY Please do not write on this exam.

Cleveland International Piano Competition: conversations with the four finalists

Adrian Perez Professor Pecherek MUS March 11, 2018

rhinegold education: subject to endorsement by ocr Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 in Eb, Op. 55, Eroica, first movement

Carlos Santana Vs. Johannes Brahms May,2018 Personal code:gnd088

Transcription:

Prelude to Oedipus Tyrannus John Knowles Paine (1839 1906) Written: 1880 81 Movements: One Style: Romantic Duration: Eight minutes Seasoned American symphony-goers would probably find it easy to rattle off the names of a good many nineteenth-century composers. It s a good bet, however, that no Americans would be on that list. There just aren t that many romantic-era American composers. But there are a few! John Knowles Paine was the oldest of the lot. He grew up in Portland, Maine. His grandfather built one of the first pipe organs in New England, and his father started and conducted the town band and ran the local music store. Young John first started studying music from a German immigrant who had settled in Portland. Then, like virtually all serious American musicians, he travelled to Europe. Paine went to Berlin to study organ and composition. Back home in the states by 1861, he settled in Boston where he was a church organist. A series of free public music lectures led to his appointment as a music instructor at Harvard, and in 1875 the college appointed him as America s first professor of music. Paine was conservative in his musical tastes, adhering to the historical forms, as developed by Bach, Handel, Mozart, and Beethoven" as opposed to the "extremely involved and complicated technics of music, like Wagner, Liszt, and their adherents." The historian Wiley Hitchcock presents a fair description of his music: Most of it cannot be faulted in workmanship, none of it in seriousness of purpose: Paine took very seriously music's mission to ''hallow pleasure, and if his music seems somewhat over-aspiring to profundity, hardly daring to relax or smile, this should be

ascribed not to incompetence but to his aesthetic attitude... In 1880, the students at Harvard endeavored to present Sophocles s tragedy Oedipus Rex. Paine provided the incidental music for the play. The three-hour drama all in Greek! was a hit. A review by John Sullivan Dwight stated, Adding lift and inspiration to the whole, making the three hours seem short, [was] the beautiful, strong, fitting, manly music composed by Professor Paine. Paine s music became so popular that a Boston Symphony patron could plead with the conductor George Henschel: Oh, Henschel, cease thy higher flight! And give the public something light; Let no more Wagner themes thy bill enhance And give the native workers just one chance. Don't give the Dvorák symphony again; If you would give us joy, oh give us Paine! 2016 John P. Varineau

Concerto in E minor for Cello and Orchestra, Op. 85 Edward Elgar (1857 1934) Written: 1919 Movements: Four Style: Romantic Duration: 30 minutes By the second decade of the twentieth century, Elgar was clearly the leading English composer and the first to gain international prominence after Henry Purcell (1659 1695). But then the devastation of World War I began and, like many other artists, Elgar lost his creative drive. I cannot do any real work with the awful shadow over us, he wrote. Shortly after the war ended, he started composing again and wrote three significant chamber works. While still in hospital recovering from a tonsillectomy, Elgar woke up and asked for a pencil and paper. He sketched out a melody that would become the opening theme of his Cello Concerto. Work progressed quickly from then on, and the concerto was ready for its premiere in October of 1919. However, the orchestra wasn t quite ready. Naturally, the lack of rehearsal affected the performance. The orchestra made a public exhibition of its miserable self, the critic Ernest Newman wrote. He did, however, go on to compliment the concerto: The work itself is lovely stuff, very simple that pregnant simplicity that has come upon Elgar s music in the last couple of years, but with a profound wisdom and beauty underlying its simplicity.... A fine spirit s lifelong wistful brooding upon the loveliness of earth. Another critic said the concerto represented, for Elgar, the angst, despair, and disillusionment he felt after the end of the War, and an introspective look at death and mortality.

You can certainly hear that sentiment in the opening statement by cello and throughout the elegiac first movement, but you won t find it at all in the light-hearted scherzo of the second movement. There is a yearning quality to the lyrical third movement, one that the cello leads throughout. The fourth movement begins with a dramatic recitative played by the cello, that leads into a more robust, almost cheery, march. Suddenly the tempo slows down, the musical clouds darken and the movement progresses to a final climax. There are two brief references to what has come before: one from the third movement and the other from the opening of the concerto itself. A final orchestral outburst finishes the concerto. 2016 John P. Varineau

Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Op. 68 Johannes Brahms (1833 1897) Written: 1855 1876 Movements: Four Style: Romantic Duration: 46 minutes Johannes Brahms began writing his first symphony in 1855, but by 1862 he had only finished the first movement. He was unusually critical of the effort, due at least in part to his veneration of Beethoven. I shall never write a symphony, he said to a friend. You have no idea how the likes of us feel when we hear the tramp of a giant like him behind us. For whatever reason, he set the work aside for another twelve years. He finally completed the score in 1876. Brahms composed his symphonies at a time when the prevailing musical direction was heading away from symphonies and toward compositions like tone poems that told musical stories. Many Romantics, including Wagner and his disciples, viewed Brahms adherence to classical forms as reactionary. Like the music of Beethoven, Brahms s Symphony No. 1 unfolds organically, depending on dramatic contrasts to propel the music forward. The first movement opens with a tremendous, persistent pounding of timpani over which bits and pieces of an indiscernible melody gradually evolves into the main themes of the exposition. Apparently, the young Brahms had taken the advice of Robert Schumann: The beginning is the main thing; if only one makes the beginning, then the end comes of itself. Brahms follows the classical tradition of placing the slow movement second. This movement is in a three-part form. It begins with a long, melancholy violin melody. A brief middle section that features solo woodwinds follows.

The plaintive opening tune returns in a lovely duet between solo violin and French horn, ending as peacefully as it had begun. Instead of the usual scherzo, the third movement is also songlike, prominently featuring the clarinet and flute. The magnificent finale begins with another long introduction but becomes gradually more agitated until the mournful call of the solo French horn interrupts it. Brahms begins the body of the movement with a lovely, broad melody in the darkest register of the strings. He then transforms, diverts and embellishes this theme. The symphony concludes with a final, very loud, brass utterance of the chorale first heard in the introduction. Jan Swafford, in his biography of Brahms, claims that Brahms First Symphony in one blow... resurrected the genre of the symphony from years of failure, [and] made it once again the king of musical forms. 2016 John P. Varineau