Overture Magazine 2019-20 BSO_Overture_Jan Feb | Page 32

ROMEO AND JULIET in 1829 at age 19, he returned to Warsaw to create the necessary vehicles for his conquest of Western Europe. Written in Warsaw in late 1829 and early 1830, the Second Piano Concerto was the first of his two concertos to be composed, but the second to be published. Chopin unveiled it at a concert in Warsaw on March 17, 1830, and it was such a tremendous success he had to repeat the program five days later. It was an equal success at his public debut in Paris—the city in which he finally settled permanently—in February 1832. In attendance, his admiring rival Franz Liszt wrote: “The endlessly renewed applause did not seem sufficient to express our enchantment at the demonstration of this talent, which disclosed a new level in the expression of poetic feeling and such felicitous innovations in artistic form.” But within a few years, Chopin virtually dropped his public performing career. Audience applause meant little to him, and his retiring temperament and frail health were poor matches for the life of a barnstorming virtuoso. Already in his Concerto, we hear something quite different from the overt showiness of Liszt’s concertos. “His music has an intensity born of introspection,” writes Chopin scholar Jim Samson. Chopin was the master of subtlety, of virtuosity that does not call too much attention to itself. And as a passionate lover of opera, he carried the tradition of bel canto opera—with its long cantilena melodic lines and sumptuous ornamentation—over to the keyboard. In the first movement, singing lyricism takes the place of conventional opening- movement drama. Again, unlike Liszt, Chopin showed relatively little interest in the orchestral part. He does grant the orchestra a lengthy exposition: its only major opportunity to shine before the piano pushes it back into a mostly accompaniment role. After a reticent beginning, its principal theme is forceful and very rhythmic. But it is the tender, songful second theme, introduced by the oboe, which will play the larger role in this movement’s emotional character. With ringing octaves, the soloist takes center stage. The principal theme is given 30 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org only cursory attention before launching a new theme of Chopin-esque lyricism, elegantly ornamented. Loving attention is devoted to the second theme, and, after the development section, Chopin can hardly wait to get back to this theme and lavish even more gorgeous embellishments on it. Movement two is a ravishing nocturne and the Concerto’s heart. It was inspired by the composer’s frustrated love for a young soprano, Konstancia Gladkowska. A great aria for piano in the bel canto tradition, its unforgettable melody is ornamented with inspired expressiveness and delicacy. In its powerful middle section, the pianist passionately articulates Chopin’s yearning for Konstancia over agitated tremolo strings. Chopin’s passion for his homeland finds expression in the dancing finale in the buoyant style of a Polish mazurka. Here the pianist demonstrates her prowess with a nonstop flight of airy, but devilishly difficult figurations, sprung from infectious dance melodies. At the end, the tonality brightens to F major and a horn signal summons forth a torrent of keyboard brilliance, guaranteed to conquer audiences. Instrumentation: Two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, bass trombone, timpani and strings. SUITE FROM ROMEO AND JULIET Sergei Prokofiev Born in Sontsivka, Ukraine, April 23, 1891; died in Moscow, Russia, March 5, 1953 As he returned to the Soviet Union in the mid-1930s after years of exile in the West, Sergei Prokofiev chose Romeo and Juliet as a gift to his homeland, honoring the Russian tradition of full-length story ballets such as Swan Lake and Sleeping Beauty. In Paris, he had already proven his skills in creating dance music with the ballets Pas d’acier and The Prodigal Son for Diaghilev and his celebrated Ballets Russes. His keen dramatic sense had also been revealed in a series of highly effective operas, including The Gambler, The Love for Three Oranges and The Fiery Angel. With a commission from Moscow’s Bolshoi Ballet in hand and the love story driving his imagination, Prokofiev wrote most of the two-hour-plus score rapidly over the summer and early fall of 1935. But when he played the music for the Bolshoi staff on October 4 th , they were dismayed: Prokofiev had given his ballet a happy ending in which Juliet awakens in time to prevent Romeo’s suicide! In his autobiography Prokofiev explained: “The reasons for this bit of barbarism were purely choreographic: living people can dance, the dead cannot.” Convinced that the lovers’ deaths could indeed be staged effectively, he rewrote his ending to match Shakespeare’s. More trouble arose as the ballet went into rehearsal. Bewildered by Prokofiev’s frequently complicated rhythms, the dancers complained that the music was “undanceable,” and the Bolshoi eventually dropped the production. But Prokofiev believed deeply in his score—a magnificent blending of his melodic gifts, sophisticated wit and cinematic skill of painting pictures with music—and in 1936, he created two concert suites to advertise his masterpiece. Audiences fell in love with the music, and ultimately, the Leningrad’s Kirov Ballet mounted a triumphant production in January 1940 that established the work as one of the jewels of the classical ballet repertoire. For these performances, Marin Alsop has created her own suite of twelve excerpts from the ballet’s score. Interspersed among the major sections that mark critical moments in the drama are five lighter sequences—“Scene,” “Morning Dance,” “Dance,” “Dance of the Antilles Girls” and “Aubade”—which relieve the tension and showcase the dancing of the corps de ballet. The weightier selections are as follows: “Montagues and Capulets”: With two savagely dissonant chords, Prokofiev sets the tragic scene as in the play’s prologue as the Prince of Verona forbids the two families to continue their feud. Then, in the swaggering macho dance of the Capulet men at Juliet’s ball, the composer incisively demonstrates why this command will be ignored. In a lyrical interlude, Romeo first spies Juliet dancing with Paris, the man her parents wish her to marry.