Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Programme Notes Online

Similar documents
SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA A JACOBS MASTERWORKS CONCERT Markus Stenz, conductor. November 17, 18 and 19, 2017

Masterpiece and CapePOPS! Series Title Sponsor

Chapter 13. The Symphony

The Classical Period-Notes

Symphony in C Igor Stravinksy

The Classical Period (1825)

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

Requiem for Orchestra and Choir

Music of the Classical Period

Unfinished Masterpieces

Part IV. The Classical Period ( ) McGraw-Hill The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Level performance examination descriptions

2015 SCHOOLS NOTES EGARR & THE GOLDEN AGE

Music Study Guide. Moore Public Schools. Definitions of Musical Terms

Resonance. Pastures New: Adieu Jennifer and Andrew. Welcome to our new President: Jennifer Carr

MUSIC HISTORY Please do not write on this exam.

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

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

Great Choral Classics

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

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

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Requiem K626 (vocal Score) Urtext By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart READ ONLINE

3. Berlioz Harold in Italy: movement III (for Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding)

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. or its affiliate(s). All rights reserved. NES, the NES logo, Pearson, the Pearson logo, and National

Orchestra Audition Information and Excerpts

Music Appreciation Final Exam Study Guide

TRUMPET CONCERTO IN E flat 3 rd MOVEMENT by HAYDN

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Chapter 20-- Important Composers and Events of the Classical Era

RSC/MusicWG/4/rev/1 7 November 2016 page 1 of 15. To: Gordon Dunsire, Chair, RDA Steering Committee

Trumpets. Clarinets Bassoons

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

Contents. Answer Key...21

Audition Information. Audition Repertoire

The Baroque Period. Better known today as the scales of.. A Minor(now with a #7 th note) From this time onwards the Major and Minor Key System ruled.

Chapter 12. Lacrymosa

Michael Haydn the Atheist?

Symphony No. 101 The Clock movements 2 & 3

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

Piano Concerto No. 2 in F Minor, Op. 21

DIES IRAE. The text describes the end of the world, or Apocalypse. Dies irae! Dies illa Solvet saeclum in favilla: Teste David cum Sibylla!

Flint School of Performing Arts Ensemble Audition Requirements

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

Huntsville Youth Orchestra Auditions. Sinfonia VIOLIN

Piano Solo (Music Scores) By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart READ ONLINE

The Classical Period

Oregon Bach Festival Discovery Series Haydn Theresienmesse, Kyrie and Gloria 2007

Music History. Middle Ages Renaissance. Classical Romantic Impressionist 20 th Century

Mu 110: Introduction to Music

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Programme Notes Online

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

YOUTH ORCHESTRAS OF LUBBOCK INFORMATION FOR AUDITION,

Friday and Saturday, January 26-27, 2018 at 8 p.m. Sunday, January 28, 2018 at 2 p.m. Helzberg Hall, Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts

Huntsville Youth Orchestra Auditions. Huntsville Youth Symphony VIOLIN

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

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

Haydn: Symphony No. 97 in C major, Hob. I:97. the Esterhazy court. This meant that the wonderful composer was stuck in one area for a large

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Programme Notes Online

LEVEL DESCRIPTIONS, CLASSICAL INSTRUMENTS AND VOCAL

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

Using Gustav Mahler s Symphony No. 1: "i. Langsam. Schleppen" to Teach Elementary Level Emotions

Topic Page: Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus ( )

Symphony No. 94 In G Major ("Surprise"): Movement 4 Sheet Music (Orchestra) By Franz Joseph Haydn

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

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

Maestoso / Majestic Adagio / Slow Rondo: allegro non troppo / Rondo: fast, but not too fast

The Many Worlds of. John R. Hale UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE

Ludwig van Beethoven

MOZART REQUIEM. Friday, October 26, 2018 at 11 am Teddy Abrams, Conductor

hhh MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES BEGIN IN GRADE 3

CLASSICAL CONNECTIONS LISTENER S GUIDE. Mozart. Sleeping. Giant

GREAT STRING QUARTETS

Bite-Sized Music Lessons

Classical Time Period

Alleluia(Tuba Part) - Sheet Music By Alleluia(Tuba Part)

1 st semester: 25 years (at the beginning of the studies)

Audition Requirements for SEASON 2018

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

Huntsville Youth Orchestra Auditions. Philharmonia VIOLIN

Haydn: Symphony No. 101 second movement, The Clock Listening Exam Section B: Study Pieces

W. A. Mozart Requiem KV 626, Klavierauszug Vocal Score, Edition Kunzelmann By Franz Beyer READ ONLINE

GENERAL PRICE LIST December 2017

GENERAL PRICE LIST February 2018

Sonata No. 13 in E-flat Major, Opus 27, No. 1, Quasi una fantasia (1801)

Education Outreach Program. of the Kansas City Chamber Orchestra. Classical Adventures. Bruce Sorrell, Music Director

If you are searching for a book by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mozart: Concerto in A Major, K. 622, for Bb Clarinet and Piano (Piano Part with Pull Out

Chapter 17: Enlightenment Thinkers. Popular Sovereignty: The belief that all government power comes from the people.

Unit Outcome Assessment Standards 1.1 & 1.3

The Joy of Band! Clinician Name Kazuhiko Tsuchiya Shuhei Tamura

Compositions by Mozart, with links to YouTube performances and additional information.

GERSHWIN S CUBAN OVERTURE and DVOŘÁK S NEW WORLD *

Substitute Excerpts 2017 Violin

Appendix C: Continuance in the Bachelor or Music Program CHURCH MUSIC

Oregon Bach Festival Discovery Series Mozart Coronation Mass 2006

Spirit Camps Staff Development. Dr. Andrew F Poor THE PROCESS OF COMPOSING "ACCEPTANCE"

EMOTIONAL AND COMPOSITIONAL ACHIEVEMENTS IN BEETHOVEN S LATE PERIOD WORKS 1. Jana Cheteleva Belevska

Jump Jam Jiggle! Gustav Holst. Arranger and Presenter, Kate Page Musicians of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra

Concerts of March 6-8, Michael Stern, Music Director. Anthony McGill, clarinet. Beethoven. Leonore Overture No. III, op. 72b (1806) Danielpour

LBSO Listening Activities. Fanfare for the Common Man Suggested time minutes

Transcription:

Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra Programme Notes Online Liverpool John Moores University Series Mozart s Requiem Saturday 3 March 2018 7.30pm sponsored by Liverpool John Moores University JOSEPH HAYDN (1732-1809) Symphony No.104 in D major London Adagio allegro / Slow fast Andante / At a walking pace Menuetto and trio: allegro / Minuet and trio: fast Finale: spiritoso / Finale: with spirit Known in English-speaking countries as the London, Haydn s Symphony No.104 in D major is only the last of twelve such works written for performance in London between 1791 and 1795. So why it should have been singled out in that way, by a nickname that could have been applied to any of them, no one really knows. It could be, however, that it is the only one of the twelve which seems to have anything of London in it, the opening theme of the last movement having been claimed as an allusion to the street cry Hot Cross Buns. On the other hand, since that same tune has been identified as the Croatian folksong Oj Jelena, by Bartók among others, the symphony could equally well have been nicknamed the Croatian. First movement It is actually more remarkable that the construction of the work is motivated by a self-renewing melodic impulse and, as a result, uncommonly well unified by thematic links between the four movements. The purpose of the rising fifth and the falling fourth in the fanfare opening to the slow introduction is not to draw

attention to their own unremarkable presence but to highlight the subversive quality of the chromatic little phrase postulated by the first violins immediately afterwards. Emphasised by sforzando colouring, this phrase assumes such a high profile in the Adagio that the beginning of the Allegro just after a brief but significant oboe solo seems at first to be part of the same introductory process. It is a beautifully contrived transition and at the same time a way of establishing the melodic shape of the first four notes of the main theme of the Allegro as basic to the work. That theme has another important characteristic in the repeated notes which, though it seems unlikely at this stage, are to take obsessive hold of the development section and to become a percussive feature of the recapitulation as well. But it is the opening phrase of the theme which, in the absence of a true second subject, supplies most of the melodic interest of the movement. Second movement Those same four notes form also (with the help of one other) the opening phrase of the main theme of the G major Andante. For all the drama of the movement, its spontaneously extended reprise and its thoughtful flute solos, that phrase is virtually the sole source of melodic interest here. Third movement Wisely in the circumstances, Haydn gives his basic motif a rest in the next movement but not without alluding to the main theme of the first movement in another way: it is represented in the theme of the Menuet, though not that of the mellifluous Trio section, by an allusion to the repeated notes which were of such obsessive interest earlier in the work. Fourth movement As for the vigorous main theme of the last movement, whether Croatian folk song or London street-cry, it takes only a minor adjustment of the basic motif of the work to match its opening

phrase. Its rustic vigour is balanced by a lyrical, almost languid second subject which, though no thematic relation, shares the harmonic subversiveness of the seminal little sforzando phrase of the introduction to the work. The balance is so well calculated, in fact, that it allows Haydn to build one of the most impressive of all his finale constructions on it. Gerald Larner 2018 WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756-1791) Requiem in D minor, K626 60 completed by Franz Xaver Süssmayr (1766-1803) 1. Introit Requiem aeternam 2. Kyrie 3. Sequence Dies irae Tuba mirum Rex tremendae Recordare Confutatis Lacrimosa 4. Offertory Domine Jesu Hostias 5. Sanctus 6. Benedictus 7. Agnus Dei 8. Communion Lux aeterna The myths surrounding Mozart s Requiem go back far beyond Peter Shaffer s Amadeus (1980), Rimsky-Korsakov s opera Mozart and Salieri (1898) or the Pushkin play (1831) upon which both are based. And Mozart himself must take responsibility for some of them. He was the first person to start drawing sinister conclusions about the anonymous patron who, sometime around early July 1791, sent a middle aged, serious, impressive man to commission a Requiem mass.

Mozart was unwell that summer. Unknown to anyone, he was already in the late stages of the kidney disorder (undiagnosable by 18th-century medicine) that would lead to his death. He experienced mood-swings, during one of which according, years later, to his wife Constanze he declared that I know I must die someone has given me acqua toffana and has calculated the precise time of my death for which they have ordered a Requiem, it is for myself I am writing this. Add an extravagant claim (in 1823) by an elderly and depressed Antonio Salieri, and the ingredients for two centuries of colourful and romantic legends are all present. (Beethoven swallowed Salieri s claims whole.) Mozart s untimely death was a major event in Vienna. On the very day (5 December 1791; he died in the early hours of the 6th) well-wishers gathered in the street beneath his Rauhensteingasse apartment. It s unsurprising that his unfinished final work of all things, a Requiem should have attracted rumours. But since the Second World War, Mozart s final illnesses have been convincingly diagnosed, and the identity of the Requiem s mysterious commissioner has been established beyond question. He was Franz, Count von Walsegg, a kindly, music-loving and mildly eccentric nobleman who enjoyed commissioning works from major composers of the day and having them performed, un-named, to his friends and household (an early variant of the guess the recording game that record-collectors like to inflict on their dinner guests even today). The Requiem was for Walsegg s adored wife Anna, who d died on Valentine s Day 1791 aged only 20. Walsegg paid Mozart half of his fee up front; the rest was to be paid on delivery of the completed score. Hence the secrecy; and hence the haste with which Constanze arranged for the Requiem to be completed after Mozart s death. Mozart had completed only the Introit in full score, but the Kyrie was largely complete, as were the vocal parts and a figured bass

for the Sequence (as far as the first eight bars of the Lacrimosa) and Offertory. Constanze gave the job of orchestration and completion to Mozart s student (and recent assistant on La Clemenza de Tito) Franz Xaver Süssmayr, who later told a Leipzig publisher that he had himself composed the Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei and all but the opening bars of the Lacrimosa. As more than one scholar has pointed out, Süssmayr was in a no-win situation. He was a capable craftsman but an undistinguished composer ( There you stand like a duck in a thunderstorm Mozart reportedly teased him You won t understand that for a long time ). Where the quality of the music is high (such as the Agnus Dei) it s been assumed that he had access to sketches (now lost) by Mozart. Where it s low (the perfunctory Sanctus, and the final Amen of the Lacrimosa Mozart had clearly indicated a full-dress fugue at this point), it s blamed on Süssmayr. Yet this is the perfectly workable form in which the Requiem has become part of our culture. Ultimately, the major creative decisions from the haunting dark-hued instrumentation, with its basset horns and trombones, to the decision to conclude the work with the music of the opening were Mozart s. For the rest, we can choose from several completions by modern scholars, or one by an actual 18th-century composer, who, moreover, discussed the work directly with Mozart. Like Count Walsegg, Süssmayr deserves sympathy, not scorn; his name, too, might with fairness be added to the blessing with which Walsegg s servant Anton Herzog concluded his account of Mozart s final masterpiece: Peace be on the ashes of the great master, and also on his revered patron, to whose liberality we are indebted for this priceless work of art. 1. Introit

Over a heavy tread, bassoons and clarinets sing a lament; the violins heave a mighty sigh and the chorus intones the traditional opening lines of the Requiem Mass. Baroque solemnity alternates with warm consolation (soprano solo). 2. Kyrie The Kyrie that follows is a stern, powerfully-worked fugue; by this stage, Mozart had assimilated his studies of JS Bach entirely into his own expressive language. 3. Sequence The terrifying vision of the Dies Irae is traditionally the angriest point of the Requiem Mass; Mozart unleashes dramatic power worthy of Don Giovanni. For the Tuba Mirum, however, he takes a more serene approach, with a lyrical trombone solo making the Last Trumpet a voice of consolation rather than threat. In the Rex tremendae the full chorus begs for mercy first to music of baroque severity, and then, more beseechingly on a dying fall. The Recordare is like a vision of paradise at the heart of the Sequence; the words explore Jesus role as redeemer and Good Shepherd and Mozart matches them with expressive, serenely unfurling vocal solos. The furious ostinato of Confutatis comes as a savage jolt, though the womens pleading cry of Voca me echoes the compassion of the Recordare and the music winds down, over a quietly pulsing heartbeat, into the Lacrimosa. Mozart completed only the first eight bars, but it seems certain that he left sketches and instructions sufficient to allow Süssmayr to complete one of music s most poignant expressions of grief. 4. Offertory

Mozart refrains from all but the most basic expressive comment on the text of the Domine Jesu; for all its bustling contrapuntal figuration and masterly vocal ensemble writing, it has a strangely subdued quality as if Mozart was stepping back in awe from the Biblical vision. The more hopeful words of the Hostias are set to music by turns luminously serene (reminiscent of his great communion anthem Ave Verum Corpus), and blazing with spiritual conviction. The final appeal to the word of the Law, Quam olim Abrahae is set of course to another masterful fugue. 5. Sanctus Left with only the most basic of sketches by Mozart, Süssmayr first evokes the necessary sense of majesty, and then appends a vigorous Osanna fugue sensibly choosing to try and match Mozart neither in ambition nor complexity. 6. Benedictus The Benedictus is a peaceful blessing, in the sunlit key of B flat major. No sketches by Mozart survive either of this movement or of the Agnus Dei, and Süssmayr claimed that both were entirely his own work. If so, he handles his forces from poised solo quartet to quiet trombones with an assurance that would have done his teacher proud, and rounds the movement off with a reprise of the Osanna fugue. 7. Agnus Dei The ominously swirling violins and sense of pain at the start of this usually tranquil movement have led some commentators to speculate that it is substantially by Mozart himself. Süssmayr was clear that he alone was the composer. 8. Communion

The music of the opening returns, now in a sunlit major key, and with angelic solo soprano replacing the sepulchral mens voices of the Requiem aeternam: Let everlasting light shine upon them, O Lord. Mozart specified that the final section of the Mass should be set to the music of the first; thus it was his vision that it should close with a return to the Kyrie fugue, bringing his life s work to an end in tones of solemn and sorrowful grandeur. Programme notes by Richard bratby 2018