Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_MAR_APR | Page 29

BRAHMS PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 themselves into two camps: those who admired the conservative, more abstract style of Johannes Brahms and those who were swept away by Richard Wagner’s progressive, opera-based “Music of the Future.” Schoenberg was unusual in that he revered both Brahms and Wagner equally. In Pelléas, we hear these two musical camps locked in a sometimes ravishing, sometimes uneasy truce. Its highly chromatic melodic and harmonic language is certainly Wagnerian as traditional tonality is stretched to the limits. On the other hand, its extensive developments of motives and themes along with its dense layers of contrapuntal voices is Brahmsian. In the key of D minor , the work unfolds as one very long movement, lasting about 45 minutes. However, Alban Berg, one of Schoenberg’s two principal pupils and surely writing with his teacher’s approval, has posited a scheme that divides the tone poem into four symphonic movements, which makes the work much easier to follow. The opening of the first movement paints the darkness and mystery of the forest where Golaud first encounters Mélisande. Permeating the entire score is a three-note motive, which is the building block of most of the longer themes. Introduced immediately in the English horn, it rises by half steps. Underneath in the violas, it evolves into the wistful rising first theme associated with Mélisande. The oboes soon add a descending, pleading second Mélisande theme. In the horns, Golaud responds with his strong, virile theme, which gradually grows passionate in the strings. The savage, dissonant Fate theme loudly predicts disaster. As this subsides, a muted trumpet proclaims Pelléas’ lighter, more carefree theme. The second movement begins in a dancing quick tempo with flutes and other woodwinds depicting Mélisande and Pelléas’ frolicking by the fountain, as she tosses Golaud’s ring in the air, then disastrously loses it in the water. A slower episode, featuring solo cello, woodwinds and the two harps, conceived a concerto as sprawling in its dimensions as this or one that assaults the listener with such a dramatic and defiant principal theme as Brahms hurls out in the first measures. The timpani thunder a mighty rolling D while violins and cellos lash out with a savage melody, apparently in a different key and with repeated ferocious trills on the discordant note A-flat, which forms a tritone — the ominous “devil in music” interval — over the sustained D pedal. Such a mood of fierce tragedy was not in tune with the fashion of the day, and so its first audience was not enthusiastic. “My Concerto has had here a brilliant and decisive — failure,” Brahms wrote to his friend Joseph Joachim. “At the conclusion three pairs of hands were brought together very slowly, whereupon a perfectly distinct hissing from all sides forbade any such demonstration.” A critic called the first movement a “monstrosity.” Brahms began composing the work in 1854 when he was 20 and in the midst of a tumultuous domestic tragedy. In February of that year, Robert Schumann, Brahms’ beloved mentor, attempted suicide and was incarcerated in a mental asylum where he died in 1856. Brahms raced to the Schumann home in Düsseldorf to comfort Clara Schumann and spent the next several years at her side, acting as go-between to her husband and in the process falling deeply in love with this beautiful and accomplished musician, 14 years his senior. It was a terrible situation for a very young and sensitive man. The month after Schumann’s suicide attempt, he began composing the concerto as a sonata for two pianos; Joachim wrote that the first movement’s mood was his response to Schumann’s plight. Soon, the piano format seemed inadequate for his big thoughts, and he tried transforming it into a symphony. But virtuoso piano passages kept intruding, and by the time of Schumann’s death, Brahms had decided he wasn’t ready to tackle a symphony. describes the sensuous scene in which Mélisande unravels her beautiful hair. In a more violent episode, Golaud’s jealousy is stirred. Here in one of the work’s most stunningly orchestrated passages, filled with eerie trombone glissandi, he leads Pelléas to the fetid vaults under the castle and threatens him, to the screams of the Fate theme. In the slow movement, a love scene between Pelléas and Mélisande revolves around the magnificent Love theme, glorying in the warmth of the low strings. Golaud, maddened by jealousy, surprises the lovers and strikes Pelléas dead. The finale reprises much of the first movement’s introductory material in a lighter but more pathos-laden scoring and emphasizing Mélisande’s themes and Fate. Golaud’s grief and contrition leads into Mélisande’s death, voiced by poignant English horn solo and then a solemn funeral march. A final epilogue, led by the horns and emphasizing the Love and Fate themes, sums up the drama and its calamitous impact on its one surviving participant, Golaud. Instrumentation: Four flutes including two piccolos, three oboes, English horn, five clarinets including two bass clarinets and E-flat clarinet, three bassoons, contrabassoon, eight horns, four trumpets, five trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps and strings. PIANO CONCERTO NO. 1 Johannes Brahms Born in Hamburg, Germany, May 7, 1833; died in Vienna, Austria, April 3, 1897 The First Piano Concerto was Brahms’ calling card to the world: his announcement that a powerful new voice had arrived on the European musical scene. When it was premiered in Hanover, with the composer as soloist, on January 22, 1859, no one had heard a concerto so bold, weighty and demanding of its listeners since Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto of 1809. And even Beethoven had not M A R –A P R 201 9 / OV E R T U R E 27