7 minute read
Guest Artist Biographies
Inon Barnatan
“One of the most admired pianists of his generation” (The New York Times), Inon Barnatan has received universal acclaim for his “uncommon sensitivity” (The New Yorker), “impeccable musicality and phrasing” (Le Figaro), and his stature as “a true poet of the keyboard: refined, searching, unfailingly communicative” (The Evening Standard).
As a soloist, Barnatan is a regular performer with many of the world’s foremost orchestras and conductors, and he was the inaugural artist-in-association of the New York Philharmonic. Equally at home as a curator and chamber musician, Barnatan is music director of La Jolla Music Society Summerfest in California, one of leading music festivals in the country, and he regularly collaborates with world-class partners such as Renée Fleming and Alisa Weilerstein. His passion for contemporary music has resulted in commissions and performances of many living composers, including premieres of new works by Thomas Adès, Andrew Norman, and Matthias Pintscher, among others.
Barnatan’s 2022.23 season highlights include concerto performances in the U.S. with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony, San Diego Symphony, and others, and internationally with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic, Auckland Philharmonia, and Philharmonie Zuidnederland.
Barnatan will give solo recitals in London, Kansas City, Aspen, and Santa Fe and play chamber music at festivals through the U.S. Barnatan will also tour North America with Les Violons du Roy, performing concertos by C.P.E. Bach and Shostakovich.
A recent addition to Barnatan’s acclaimed discography is a two-volume set of Beethoven’s complete piano concertos, recorded with Alan Gilbert and the Academy of St Martin in the Fields on Pentatone. In its review, BBC Music Magazine wrote “The central strength of this first installment of Inon Barnatan’s piano concertos cycle is that, time and again, it puts you in touch with that feeling of ongoing wonderment.”
Born in Tel Aviv in 1979, Barnatan started playing the piano at the age of three, when his parents discovered his perfect pitch, and made his orchestral debut at 11. He studied with some of the 20th century’s most illustrious pianists and teachers, including Professor Victor Derevianko, Christopher Elton, and Maria Curcio, and the late Leon Fleisher was also an influential teacher and mentor. For more information, visit inonbarnatan.com.
Program notes by J. Mark Baker
This weekend, guest conductor Roderick Cox is joined by pianist Inon Barnatan for a showcase of frenzied seduction, serene lyricism, and compelling majesty. The first half includes an early tone poem by Richard Strauss and a beguiling concerto by Beethoven. After intermission, we’ll soak up Sibelius’s natureinfused Symphony No. 5.
Richard Strauss
Born 11 June 1864; Munich, German
Died 8 September 1949; Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany
Don Juan, Opus 20
Composed: 1888
First performance: 11 November 1889; Weimar, Germany
Last MSO performance: January 2019; Carlos Kalmar, conductor
Instrumentation: 3 flutes (3rd doubling piccolo); 2 oboes (2nd doubling English horn); 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; contrabassoon; 4 horns; 3 trumpets; tuba; timpani; percussion (cymbals, glockenspiel, suspended cymbals, triangle); harp; strings
Approximate duration: 17 minutes
Richard Strauss was only 24 when he composed the tone poem Don Juan, his first important work. He cited Nikalaus Lenau’s (1802-1850) German verse play as his source of inspiration, but we should also duly note that Strauss had conducted Mozart’s Don Giovanni in Munich not long before he set to work on Don Juan. Strauss prefaced the published score with excerpts from Lenau’s poem; they include such intriguing lines as “The charmed circle of many kinds of beautiful, stimulating femininity ... I should like to traverse them in a storm of pleasure, and die of a kiss upon the lips of the last woman.” Lenau’s verses are more like reflections on amorous pursuits than lists of the titular character’s womanizing conquests.
The swirling, energetic opening theme is meant to portray Don Juan himself. This motif soon yields to a romantic melody, first introduced by a solo violin. A gentle oboe suggests a nighttime assignation. Insistent horns then break the mood as they intone a bold, self-assured theme. Melodies are restated and mingled together, always borne along by the composer’s matchless orchestration.
In Lenau’s poem, Don Juan, tired of chasing women, allows himself to be defeated in a duel. Strauss’s tone poem depicts this with a piercing stab from the trumpets. He drops, trembling, to the ground. The atmosphere becomes quiet and forlorn, signifying the protagonist’s imminent demise; it’s a disconsolate ending rather than a fortissimo finale. The music’s final phrases grow ever softer, concluding with what sounds like the last breaths of a dying man. Don Juan’s life was over, but Strauss’s magnificent career had just begun.
Ludwig Van Beethoven
Baptized 17 December 1770; Bonn, Germany
Died 26 March 1827; Vienna, Austria
Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, Opus 58
Composed: 1805-06
First performance: 6 March 1807; palace of Prince Lobkowitz, Vienna (private)
22 December 1808; Vienna, Austria (public)
Last MSO performance: May 2017; Edo de Waart, conductor; Ronald Brautigam, piano
Instrumentation: flute; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 2 horns; 2 trumpets; timpani; strings
Approximate duration: 34 minutes
Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4 dates from around the same time as the Waldstein and Appassionata piano sonatas, the Triple Concerto, Opus 56, the three string quartets, Opus 59 (“Razumovsky”), and the Violin Concerto, Opus 61. The composer dedicated the work to his friend, patron, and pupil Archduke Rudolph of Austria. Its first public performance took place on a four-hour marathon concert that also included the first performances of Symphonies No. 5 and No. 6, the Choral Fantasy, Opus 80, the soprano concert aria Ah, perfido!, and portions of the Mass in C, Opus 86. At the still-young age of 38, it was the last time Beethoven would appear as a concerto soloist due to his increasing deafness.
In his landmark book The Classical Style (1972), Charles Rosen wryly observes, “the most important fact about the concerto form is that the audience waits for the soloist to enter.” In the exquisitely lyrical opening phrases of the G major piano concerto, Beethoven offers a gentle rebuff to Rosen’s axiom, beginning with the piano alone. The orchestra enters four bars later, quietly echoing the soloist’s motif, but in the strikingly distant key of B major. Only after several pages does the texture grow into a full tutti and a true conversation between the piano and orchestra begin.
The compelling E minor Andante con moto – a literal dialogue between piano and strings – in the 19th century was said to depict Orpheus (soloist) taming the Furies (strings). Beethoven scholar Lewis Lockwood posits an equally intriguing notion, equating the second movement to an operatic scena in which “entreaty is met at first by obdurate refusal … The rhetorical character of the movement, like no other in Beethoven, invites association with tradition, and one of these may well have been that of the expressive aria with strings from Mozart’s late Italian works.”
Any remaining oppositions are reconciled in the sprightly rondo-finale. It begins softly, with a lively motif in the strings. Then, for the first time in the concerto, the trumpets and timpani make their entrance. The fleet, energetic piano is afforded ample opportunity for virtuoso display as Beethoven’s soulful and captivating Opus 58 dashes to its conclusion.
Jean Sibelius
Born 8 December 1865; Hämeenlinna, Finland
Died 20 September 1957; Järvenpää, Finland
Symphony No. 5 in E-flat major, Opus 82
Composed: 1915; revised 1916, 1919
Premiere: 8 December 1915; Helsinki, Finland (original version)
24 November 1919; Helsinki, Finland (final version)
Last MSO performance: January 2013; Francesco Lecce-Chong, conductor
Instrumentation: 2 flutes; 2 oboes; 2 clarinets; 2 bassoons; 4 horns; 3 trumpets; 3 trombones; timpani; strings
Approximate duration: 30 minutes
Jean Sibelius was born into a Swedish-speaking family in a hamlet in south-central Finland. The man who would become the most famous Finn in history did not begin to speak the Finnish language until age eight and acquired complete proficiency in the language only as a young man. Though he was closely identified with Finnish nationalism, it wasn’t because he wrote folksy musical bonbons – or even commanding pieces like his well-known Finlandia. No, his stature rests chiefly on his accomplishment as a composer of that most serious of musical genres – the symphony.
Sibelius’s Fifth Symphony – probably the second-most popular, after Symphony No. 2 – dates from the years of World War I, his only major composition during this time. Because of the national hostilities, Sibelius lost revenue from his German publishers Breitkopf & Härtel; his conducting commitments abroad were also curtailed. As a result, he targeted the domestic market, penning a great deal of piano music and of violin and piano miniatures.
Originally cast in four movements, Sibelius’s Opus 82 was completed in time for his 50th birthday (8 December 1915) – an occasion that was treated almost as a national holiday; he conducted the work’s premiere in Helsinki. He wasn’t entirely satisfied with his original efforts, however, and over the next few years made revisions. What had been four movements became three, as he linked together the two opening movements, making the work bolder and more confident. There’s a lot a take in: listen for the various layers of orchestral color – strings, brass, winds – and how they both interweave and act separately. In the strings, the timbral qualities of tremolos are also fascinating, as they move back and forth from primary to secondary material. Throughout, the dynamic contrasts range from ppp to fff.
The second movement is a lovely pastoral interlude in G major. Formally, we might think of it as a set of variations on a five-note motif, first sounded by the violas and cellos, pizzicato. Though much of the music is decidedly arcadian, for contrast there is the occasional darkening of both harmony and orchestration. There is also a bit of what Igor Stravinsky, who was fond of some of Sibelius’s music, once referred to as “Italian-melody-gone-north.”
It is no secret that Sibelius was frequently inspired by his native homeland. Indeed, the Finnish landscape is often palpable in his music. Nature thus infuses the most famous motif of his Fifth Symphony, the so-called “Swan Hymn.” He explained this in a 1915 diary entry: “Today at ten to eleven, I saw 16 swans. One of my greatest experiences! Lord God, what beauty! They circled over me for a long time. Disappeared into the solar haze like a gleaming silver ribbon.” Sibelius depicts this with a swinging, endlessly repeating ostinato in the horns, as a beautiful descant in the woodwinds and violins sails above. In the symphony’s final pages, we’re back in the home key of E-flat major as brass and timpani hammer out the swan theme. At the very end, six decisive chords from the full orchestra bring this powerful work to a stirring conclusion.