BEETHOVEN’S FIFTH
Thursday 27 April, 7.30pm Usher Hall, Edinburgh
Friday 28 April, 7.30pm City Halls, Glasgow
Saturday 29 April, 7.30pm Aberdeen Music Hall
Britten Simple Symphony
Shostakovich Cello Concerto No 2
Interval of 20 minutes
Beethoven Symphony No 5 in C minor
Mark Wigglesworth Conductor
Laura van der Heijden Cello
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Our Musicians YOUR ORCHESTRA
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WHAT YOU ARE ABOUT TO HEAR
Britten (1913–1976)
Simple Symphony, Op 4 (1933/34)
Boisterous Bourrée
Playful Pizzicato
Sentimental Sarabande
Frolicsome Finale
Shostakovich (1906-1975)
Cello Concerto No 2 in G Minor, Op 126 (1966)
Largo
Allegretto
Allegretto
Beethoven (1770-1827)
Symphony No 5 in C minor, Op 67 (1804–1808)
Allegro con brio
Andante con moto
Scherzo: Allegro
Allegro – Presto
You could just about make a case that there are three symphonies in tonight’s programme, even if they’re very different in nature and style. Britten’s is a celebration of childhood innocence, brief, dashing and energetic. Shostakovich thought his Second Cello Concerto felt more like a symphony with a solo cellist (and its ambitions and profundity would undoubtedly merit that description). As for Beethoven – well, he created what’s surely become music history’s most iconic example of the form, a Symphony that would set the agenda for countless later works.
It was at the age of just 20 that Benjamin Britten composed his Simple Symphony in 1933-4, during his final year as a student at London’s Royal College of Music. But he based the Symphony on snippets of piano pieces and songs that he’d composed many years before, between the ages of nine and 12. And he’s proudly explicit about those earlier pieces in the Symphony’s score, marking the themes clearly and indicating which childhood works they came from.
Indeed, Britten was preoccupied by ideas of childhood innocence and adult experience throughout his composing career, from the death of the eponymous anti-hero’s boy apprentice in Peter Grimes through to the forbidden lust of his final opera, Death in Venice. Written by a composer barely out of his teens looking back to his own childhood, however, the Simple Symphony falls firmly into Britten’s innocent side, though he nonetheless provides sophisticated and often humorous settings for those youthful melodies in the Symphony’s four brief movements.
The opening ‘Boisterous Bourrée’ is a vigorous Baroque dance whose main theme is shared between pairs of instruments – second violins and cellos, then violas and first violins – before a more graceful second theme enters over a gently lapping accompaniment. The ‘Playful Pizzicato’ is the Symphony’s scherzo, deftly scored and full of bewitching sonic variety despite restricting itself to plucked strings throughout. Its folksy central section bears an uncanny resemblance to a piece called ‘Barwick Green’, written in 1924 by Arthur Wood – and far better known as the theme tune to The Archers.
The slow and intense ‘Sentimental Sarabande’ is the Symphony’s longest movement, in which Britten injects another Baroque dance form with the pathos of an English folk song – perhaps gazing back in time further than the Baroque to the Elizabethan English music of Dowland and others that he so loved. He brings
the Symphony to a rousing, rhythmic conclusion in his ‘Frolicsome Finale’, which seems to stick doggedly to the downcast minor before swerving into the major mode for its sparkling conclusion.
Though it was written more than three decades later, there are clear connections between tonight’s next piece – Shostakovich’s Cello Concerto No 2 – and the youthful offering from Britten that we’ve just heard.
For a start, despite being separated by geographical distance and often insurmountable political barriers, Britten and Shostakovich were firm friends and mutual admirers. Their friendship had been nurtured by another man: the visionary Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich. Britten wrote his 1963 Cello Symphony for Rostropovich, who premiered it the following year in Moscow. Shostakovich wrote both of his
TheSimpleSymphony fallsfirmlyintoBritten’s innocentside,though henonethelessprovides sophisticatedandoften humoroussettingsfor thoseyouthfulmelodiesin theSymphony’sfourbrief movements.Benjamin Britten
cello concertos for the great cellist, and –perhaps partly inspired by Britten’s earlier work – even considered calling the Second Concerto a symphony with a solo cello part. Not without reason: the Concerto charts a troubled journey through darkness and light that feels more akin to symphonic profundity than the virtuoso flamboyance of some concertos.
Shostakovich and Rostropovich had first met in 1943, when the cellist was a student in Shostakovich’s orchestration class at the Moscow Conservatoire. The older man was immediately struck by his pupil, later remembering ‘the intense, restless mind and the high spirituality that he brings to his mastery’. By the time he came to write his Second Cello Concerto two decades later, however, Shostakovich had been through several cycles of official Soviet censure and denunciation for his daringly forward-looking, rule-breaking music, followed by supposedly humble
apologies, and gradual rehabilitation. His health was increasingly fragile – he had one heart attack just before beginning work on the Concerto, and another just a month after finishing the piece. It would be Shostakovich’s penultimate concerto, and he’d die just nine years after its premiere, which took place at a celebratory official 60th birthday concert in Moscow on 25 September 1966.
That state celebration of his anniversary, offering official recognition for Shostakovich’s reputation and achievements, may have encouraged the composer to feel a greater sense of calm and security. The terrors of Stalin’s regime had indeed begun to ease slightly when Nikita Khrushchev became Soviet leader in 1953 (though Leonid Brezhnev would re-tighten restrictions when he took power in 1964). That possible calm and security may lie behind the Concerto’s somewhat more modest, focused, understated
Despiteitsfocusand concision,however,the Second Cello Concerto remainsadeeplypowerful piece,andonethat–as withsomuchmusicby Shostakovich – seems to raisemorequestionsthan it answers.Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich
musical style – the so-called ‘late style’ that also characterises Shostakovich’s final symphonies and string quartets. It’s equally possible, however, that what we might hear as somewhat calm detachment is actually closer to quiet desperation at the inescapable cycles of repression that the composer had endured for decades.
Despite its focus and concision, however, the Second Cello Concerto remains a deeply powerful piece, and one that – as with so much music by Shostakovich – seems to raise more questions than it answers. Shostakovich’s opening movement begins in darkness and solitude, with the cello soloist mulling over a few notes low in its register. The music increases in energy and rises higher through the orchestra, even allowing in a sudden burst of light with its second main theme from the distinctive combination of xylophone, harp and woodwind. But a bass drum thumps its way through the cellist’s solo cadenza – perhaps a ringmaster cracking their whip, or an encouraging supporter (it’s impossible to tell which) –and the movement ends enigmatically and inconclusively.
Shostakovich’s devilish scherzo of a second movement is based around a street song, ‘Bagels! Buy my bagels!’, from Odessa, where he wrote the Concerto while convalescing after his cardiac problems. The song tune is first heard against rousing oom-pah accompaniment from the woodwind, but later takes on a far more grotesque, almost surreal sense, as if things are not quite right – and as in the first movement, drums (this time timpani) make aggressive contributions to the sinister atmosphere. Horn fanfares and a rattling drumroll lead directly into
Shostakovich’s finale, though they’re quickly taken over by the cello soloist and tambourine in what sounds like a weaker, cut-price alternative. This time it’s the snare drum that makes its mark on the soloist’s showy cadenza, but after what’s unmistakably a send-up of the climax of Mahler’s First Symphony, the soloist makes a rapid return to solitude, with just the quiet pattering of distant percussion for company.
There’s surely no more famous opening to a piece of music than the four powerful unison notes that launch Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony (followed quickly, of course, by four more). When asked what they meant, Beethoven apparently (and famously) replied: ‘Thus Fate knocks at the door!’ That’s according to his secretary and biographer Anton Schindler, at least. And frankly, we probably shouldn’t take Schindler’s account too seriously. He was almost certainly out to enhance his own reputation by painting his relationship with the revered composer as closer and more serious than it really was.
Nonetheless, the idea of a destructive ‘fate’ intruding on Beethoven’s life and work isn’t so far-fetched, nor is the idea that Beethoven himself might have seen things in those terms. When he completed the Fifth Symphony in 1808, having worked on it for the previous four years, he’d been suffering from tinnitus and hearing loss for a decade, a condition that would only worsen. Six years earlier, the composer famously wrote an (unsent) letter to his two brothers, which we now call his Heiligenstadt Testament, in which he admitted to having contemplated suicide, finally resolving to live for the sake of his pioneering art.
His steadily increasing deafness also forced Beethoven to move away from the activities as a pianist for which he was best known in Vienna, encouraging him to develop his parallel reputation as a composer. Indeed, it was in the same, notorious concert in which his Fifth Symphony was premiered – on 22 December 1808, in an ill-conceived, icy-cold mega-event that also featured the premiere of his ‘Pastoral’ Symphony, his Choral Fantasy, the concert aria ‘Ah! perfido’, some piano improvisations and two movements from his Mass in C – that Beethoven gave his final performance as a soloist with an orchestra, in his own Piano Concerto No 4.
Another factor to add to this already complex mix of ideas behind the Fifth Symphony is the French Revolution, whose guiding tenets of liberty, equality and fraternity chimed harmoniously with Beethoven’s own political beliefs. It’s been suggested – by eminent UK conductor Sir John Eliot Gardiner and
others – that the four famous notes of the Symphony’s opening are derived from the revolutionary Hymne du Panthéon by Luigi Cherubini, written in 1794.
What’s truly revolutionary, however, is what Beethoven does with those four opening notes. They go on to permeate every aspect of the Symphony’s first movement, sometimes plainly for all to hear, sometimes more submerged within the texture or structure, bringing a striking sense of unity and purpose to the music – perhaps representing inescapable fate, as Schindler suggested, or perhaps simply indicating meticulous craftsmanship. They even serve to herald the arrival of the movement’s far gentler, more lyrical second main theme, first heard flowing in the violins.
The slower second movement is a set of variations on two contrasting themes – the first a sweet, gentle melody for violas and cellos, the second a more assertive, militarystyle march. If the third movement is truly a Scherzo, it’s a dark, march-like one, though it also summons back the Symphony’s four opening notes in its strident main melody. Through a dramatic crescendo propelled forward by relentless timpani beats, Beethoven drives the listener from the sinister Scherzo straight into his finale, which erupts with a sense of blazing light and optimism. Schindler also speculated that the Symphony represented the story of a hero and his ultimately victorious battles against fate. Hearing the joy and triumph in Beethoven’s final movement, it’s an interpretation that it’s hard to disagree with – and one that went on to inspire countless later composers, from Mahler to Richard Strauss, even Shostakovich.
© David Kettle Ludwig van BeethovenTCHAIKOVSKY’S FIFTH
4-5 May, 7.30pm
Edinburgh | Glasgow
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Conductor MARK WIGGLESWORTH
Mark Wigglesworth is recognised internationally for his masterly interpretations both in the opera house and in the concert hall, for his highly detailed performances that combine a finely considered architectural structure with great sophistication and rare beauty. He is an outstanding conductor who has forged many enduring relationships with orchestra and opera companies across the world, conducting repertoire ranging from Mozart through to Boulez.
Wigglesworth has enjoyed a long relationship with English National Opera (Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk, Cosi fan Tutti, Falstaff, Katya Kabanova, Parsifal, Force of Destiny, Magic Flute, Jenufa, Don Giovanni, and Lulu), and operatic engagements elsewhere include The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, Rise and Fall of Mahagonny, La Clemenza di Tito), The Metropolitan Opera, New York (The Marriage of Figaro) as well as at The Bavarian State Opera, Opéra national de Paris, Semperoper Dresden, Teatro Real, The Netherlands Opera, La Monnaie, Welsh National Opera, Glyndebourne, and Opera Australia. In 2017 he received the Oliver Award for Outstanding Achievement in Opera.
On the concert platform, highlights include performances with the Berlin Philharmonic, Royal Concertgebouw, London Symphony, London Philharmonic, Boston Symphony, New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Cleveland Orchestra, Tokyo Symphony, and the Sydney Symphony. His recordings include a critically acclaimed complete cycle of the Shostakovich Symphonies with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales and the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic, Mahler Sixth and Tenth symphonies, with the Melbourne Symphony, a disc of English music with the Sydney Symphony, Britten Peter Grimes with Glyndebourne, and the Brahms Piano Concertos with Stephen Hough.
He has written articles for The Guardian and The Independent, made a six-part TV series for the BBC entitled Everything to Play For, and held positions as Associate Conductor of the BBC Symphony, Principal Guest Conductor of the Swedish Radio Symphony, the Adelaide Symphony, Music Director of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, and Music Director of English National Opera. His book The Silent Musician: Why Conducting Matters was published in October 2018 by Faber & Faber.
© Sim Canetty-ClarkeCello LAURA VAN DER HEIJDEN
Admired for her captivating sonority and creative programming, Laura van der Heijden has emerged as one of the leading cellists of her generation. Her first album with Chandos Records, Pohádka was released in 2022 to critical acclaim.
Highlights of the coming season include touring with the Brno Philharmonic (Martinů), BBC Symphony at the Barbican as part of the George Walker Total Immersion project conducted by Alpesh Chauhan, Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Britten Sinfonia, BBC Scottish with the World Premiere of a new work by Cheryl Frances-Hoad, and Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. In 2023, she will tour the US with the Keleidoscope Chamber Collective, and is also Artist in Focus at King’s Place, London performing in two contrasting chamber music recitals and CPE Bach with the Aurora Orchestra. She also gives solo and chamber recitals at Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Wigmore Hall, Cheltenham Music Festival and at the Bad Kissingen Festival as part of a trio ensemble.
Her engagements in recent years include concerts with leading orchestras such as Yomiuri Nippon Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonia Orchestra, BBC Scottish Symphony and BBC National Orchestra of Wales, the Royal and BBC Philharmonic Orchestras, as well as the Academy of St Martin in the Fields, European Union Chamber and English Chamber Orchestras, New Zealand Symphony, BBC Concert Orchestra at the 2018 BBC Proms, and with Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in the opening concert of the inaugural BBC Proms Australia. She has performed at venues including the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall in Moscow, Amsterdam’s Het Concertgebouw, Opernhaus Zürich, Wigmore Hall, LSO St Luke’s, Leeds Town Hall, Usher Hall Edinburgh, Tokyo Metropolitan Theatre, Smetana Hall Prague, Snape Maltings, Saffron Hall, Kings Place and St George’s Bristol. She has made numerous appearances on BBC Radio 3 In Tune, and has worked with such distinguished musicians as Sir Andrew Davis, Karl-Heinz Steffens, Kirill Karabits, Ryan Wigglesworth, Huw Watkins, Krzysztof Chorzelski, the Redon Quartet and the Brodsky Quartet.
Laura is a graduate of St John’s College, Cambridge. She plays a late 17th-century cello by Francesco Ruggieri of Cremona, on generous loan from a private collection.
For full biography please visit sco.org.uk
© Sam TrenchBiography
SCOTTISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
The internationally celebrated Scottish Chamber Orchestra is one of Scotland’s National Performing Companies.
Formed in 1974 and core funded by the Scottish Government, the SCO aims to provide as many opportunities as possible for people to hear great music by touring the length and breadth of Scotland, appearing regularly at major national and international festivals and by touring internationally as proud ambassadors for Scottish cultural excellence.
Making a significant contribution to Scottish life beyond the concert platform, the Orchestra works in schools, universities, colleges, hospitals, care homes, places of work and community centres through its extensive Creative Learning programme. The SCO is also proud to engage with online audiences across the globe via its innovative Digital Season.
An exciting new chapter for the SCO began in September 2019 with the arrival of dynamic young conductor Maxim Emelyanychev as the Orchestra’s Principal Conductor.
The SCO and Emelyanychev released their first album together (Linn Records) in November 2019 to widespread critical acclaim. The repertoire - Schubert’s Symphony No. 9 in C major ‘The Great’ –is the first symphony Emelyanychev performed with the Orchestra in March 2018.
The SCO also has long-standing associations with many eminent guest conductors and directors including Conductor Emeritus Joseph Swensen, François Leleux, Pekka Kuusisto, Nicola Benedetti, Richard Egarr, Andrew Manze and John Storgårds.
The Orchestra enjoys close relationships with many leading composers and has commissioned almost 200 new works, including pieces by the late Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, Sir James MacMillan, Sally Beamish, Martin Suckling, Einojuhani Rautavaara, Karin Rehnqvist, Mark-Anthony Turnage, Nico Muhly, Anna Clyne and Associate Composer Jay Capperauld.
For full biography please visit sco.org.uk
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