Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_MAR_APR | Page 18

SCHEHERAZADE DOWNTOWN BALTIMORE THE CITY IS IN YOUR POCKET. she is tried by a court of religious zealots (‘Scheherazade and the Men with Beards’), during which the men argue doctrine among themselves and rage and shout at her only to have her calmly respond to their accusations; and a final ‘escape, flight and sanctuary,’ which must be the archetypal dream of any woman importuned by a man or men. “At the same time, Scheherazade.2 is also a virtuoso romantic symphony- concerto on the grand scale that acknowledges its predecessors in works by Sibelius, Prokofiev and Berg. “I composed the piece specifically for Leila Josefowicz, who has been my friend and champion of my music (and many other composers) for nearly 15 years. Together we’ve performed my Violin Concerto and my concerto for amplified violin, The Dharma at Big Sur, many times. This work is a true collaboration and reflects a creative dialogue that went back and forth for well over a year…Leila struck me as the perfect embodiment of that kind of empowered strength and energy that a modern Scheherazade would possess.” Instrumentation: Two flutes, piccolo, two oboes, English horn, two clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, percussion, cimbalom, two harps, celesta, two harps and strings. GoDowntownBaltimore.com can help you find a place to eat, a place to grab a drink, a place to see a show, and a place to call your own. SCHEHERAZADE Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov Born in Tikhvin, Russia, March 18, 1844; died in Lyubensk near St. Petersburg, Russia, June 21, 1908 Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade is as intoxicating and seductive as the alluring storyteller for whom it is named. A joy for both audiences and musicians, it is music to make one fall in love with the symphony orchestra itself: its power, its delicacy and its limitless palette of instrumental colors. What Rimsky wrote about its companion piece 16 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org Capriccio espagnol applies equally well here: “The opinion formed by both critics and public that… [it] is a magnificently orchestrated piece —is wrong. [It] is a brilliant composition for the orchestra. The change of timbres, the felicitous choice of melodic designs and figuration patterns, exactly suiting each kind of instrument, brief virtuoso cadenzas for solo instruments…constitute here the very essence of the composition and not its garb or instrumentation.” In fact, Scheherazade could well be called a “concerto for orchestra,” with the solo violin, representing the Persian enchantress, simply the leader of a company of individual soloists and sections playing as ensemble soloists. Despite his disclaimer, Rimsky —a leader among the St. Petersburg- based “Mighty Handful” of Russian nationalist composers—was indeed one of the greatest orchestrators in history and a major influence on orchestration in the 20th century. Not only did he inspire his pupils Glazunov, Prokofiev and, above all, Stravinsky (without Rimsky we would never have had the instrumental brilliance of Firebird, Petrouchka or Rite of Spring!), but also Ravel, Debussy and Respighi. Rimsky’s three most popular works — the Capriccio, Scheherazade and the Russian Easter Festival Overture —were all composed within a year of each other. Created during the summer of 1888, Scheherazade was inspired by the Persian legend of the cruel Sultan who ordered all his wives put to death after their wedding night and of Scheherazade who so beguiled him with her “Thousand and One” tales that he kept postponing her execution until finally she won his love. But Rimsky does not tell any of her stories in detail. And he urged audiences not to take his movement titles too literally: “I meant these hints to direct slightly the hearer’s imagination on the path which my own fancy had traveled, and to leave more …particular conceptions to the…mood of each [listener].”