Overture Magazine 2019-20 BSO_Overture_Jan Feb | Page 25

SAINT-SAËNS CELLO CONCERTO This theme dominates the opening section, which is like an open-ended sonata form. Eventually, the cello relaxes briefly into a lovely stepwise melody, demonstrating its ability to sing. These two themes are developed extensively before Saint-Saëns breaks off into something very different. The Allegretto con moto is an exquisite interlude: a “slow movement” in the style of a very French minuet. Muted strings announce its dainty, lightly staccato theme. Instead of taking up this theme, the cello offers its own countermelody: a languid, flowing waltz. Whirling oboes bring back hints of the turbulent theme, and soon we are back in the midst of a delayed “recapitulation” of the opening section. There are new themes too: a syncopated, nostalgic melody for the cello and later a brooding, romantic excursion that opens at the bottom of the cello’s range and eventually reaches its high- soprano top. Interspersed are a host of brilliant feats displaying all aspects of the cellist’s technique. An acceleration and a switch from A minor to brighter A major bring the Concerto to a fiery conclusion. Instrumentation: Two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani and strings. SYMPHONY NO. 7 IN D MINOR Antonín Dvořák Born in Nelahozeves, Czech Republic September 8, 1841; died in Prague, Czech Republic, May 1, 1904 The Seventh Symphony was Dvořák’s bid to make a big noise in the world. As a young composer, he had been hampered by living in Bohemia, then a rural backwater of the mighty Austrian empire, and for many years his fame was strictly local. In the mid 1870s, Brahms discovered him and generously used his power in the Viennese musical establishment to promote Dvořák’s career. By 1883, the Czech composer was finally poised for international acclaim when his choral-orchestral Stabat Mater scored a major success in London. The next year, Dvořák traveled there himself to conduct his music, and the adulation reached fever pitch. The composer remembered his reception at one of the British choral festivals: “As soon as I appeared, I received a tempestuous welcome from the audience of 12,000.… I had to bow my thanks again and again, the orchestra and choir applauding me with no less fervor.…I am convinced that England offers me a new and certainly happier future, and one which I hope may benefit our entire Czech art.” London’s Royal Philharmonic Society promptly requested a new symphony for their 1885 concerts. Thus, his Symphony in D Minor was born and premiered by the Royal Philharmonic under the composer’s baton on April 22, 1885. Today most commentators rank the Seventh as Dvořák’s greatest symphony, if not the greatest piece he ever wrote. The British musicologist Donald Francis Tovey linked it with Schubert’s “Great C Major” Symphony and Brahms’ four symphonies “as among the greatest and purest examples of this art-form since Beethoven.” Dvořák would have been delighted to have this work mentioned alongside Brahms’ symphonies, for Brahms was his model and mentor. Early in 1884, he had heard the German’s recently completed Third Symphony and was bowled over. But though the Seventh was inspired by Brahms’ Third, it is no copy. A more tragic work, it displays the dark defiance of the Czech underdog. Dvořák was intensely proud of his nationality and determined that his music would stand apart from the dominant Austro- German school. While striving for a more universal tone, his Seventh still proudly flaunts its Czech origins, especially in its third movement. The first movement opens with a darkly murmuring theme in the low strings, with ominous diminished- seventh harmonies contributed twice by woodwinds. Dvořák said this theme came to him while watching hundreds of Hungarian patriots demonstrating against the Austrian imperial regime disembark at the Prague railroad station; like the Czechs, the Hungarians suffered under Austrian domination. Soon the full orchestra attacks this theme with defiant force. But flutes and clarinets followed by violins soon sing a marvelous flowing melody, temporarily easing the tension. In a short but powerful development section, Dvořák probes the mysteries of his opening conspiratorial theme. Many have called the second movement the finest the composer ever wrote. Its great beauty mingles sorrow with protest. Dvořák had recently lost his mother, to whom he was very close, and the steady slide into insanity of his Czech colleague Bedrich Smetana also grieved him. This movement is full of poignant melodies clothed in gorgeous orchestral hues. Notable among them are the opening theme for clarinet and bassoon, a soft rising-and-falling melody for the violins and the haunting music for horns immediately following. Dvořák scholar Otakar Sourek describes the third movement as “a wild, unhappy dance in hard, syncopated… rhythms and dark orchestral coloring, in which the expression of wrathful defiance flares up with no less fury than in the opening movement.” The inspiration is the traditional Czech furiant dance with its provocative cross- rhythms. Despite its lovely surface, the woodwind-dominated trio section also shares in the agitation, its serenity troubled by “the incessant rumbling of the basses” (Tovey). Defiance also drives the finale, with its baleful opening theme jumping an octave, then collapsing back by a dissonant half step. The cellos soon offer a soaring melody, but it is the baleful theme that dominates the action. Miraculously, in the symphony’s final moments Dvořák transforms it from dark opposition to the voice of triumph in his blazing D-major conclusion. Instrumentation: Two flutes including piccolo, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, timpani and strings. Notes by Janet E. Bedell, © 2020 JA N – F E B 2020 / OV E R T U R E 23