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WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
An evening with the Cleveland Orchestra
By Alex Lantier
12 December 2007
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This writer recently had the opportunity to attend a concert
of the Cleveland Orchestra, directed by guest conductor James
Conlon. The orchestra, founded in 1918, has long been considered
one of Americas bestan opportunity to hear them play
is not to be missed, despite ticket prices.
Conlon has directed orchestras in Rotterdam, Cologne, and Paris.
He now heads the Los Angeles Opera and teaches at several of US
summer music festivals: Aspen, Ravinia and Tanglewood. He has
been for some time a champion of the music of composers killed
or forced to flee Europe by the Nazisa much-under-appreciated
group including Alexander von Zemlinsky, Kurt Weill, Erich Wolfgang
Korngold, Erwin Schulhoff, Karl Amadeus Hartmann and Ernst Krenek.
The piano soloist was Jonathan Biss, a 27-year-old graduate
of the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and the son of
noted violinist Miriam Fried.
The program was:
La Valse, by Maurice Ravel
La Mer, by Claude Debussy
Intermission
Piano Concerto #4
Leonore Overture #3, both by Ludwig van Beethoven.
The reasons for the decision to play the works in reverse chronological
orderthey date from 1920, 1905, 1808, and 1806 respectivelywere
not completely clear. Closing with an overture is perhaps an amusing
slap in the face at tradition, but this listener found the effort
to refocus his attention from the vast scale of La Mer
to the more intimate one of the piano concerto a bit wrenching.
Perhaps stubbornly, this review will consider the pieces in chronological
order.
The overture may be the most performed of several Beethoven
wrote for his opera, Fidelio. With a libretto of Joseph
Sonnleithner based on a French text by Jean-Nicolas Bouilly, the
opera tells the story of Leonore, who disguises herself as a prison
guard and takes on the name of Fidelio in order to rescue her
husband, Florestan, from death as a political prisoner. It is
one of Beethovens more explicit testimonials to his democratic
political sympathies.
The overture exhibits to the highest degree a characteristic
trait of his music: the ability to produce immense tension and
drama with ostensibly simple musical devicesdelaying the
resolution of a basic harmonic sequence, forcing listeners to
strain to hear the music by instructing musicians to play very
softly, etc.
It begins with a long descending scale, played very slowly
and quietly. One wonders when things will finally change. Melodies
from the opera begin to appear, notably the theme Florestan sings
at the beginning of Act II of the opera, when he has a vision
of Leonore coming to save him. The second main theme is a faster,
hopeful melody, introduced once softly in a low register, and
then rising in volume and pitch. The two themes alternate and
intermingle. After calls from an offstage trumpet, traditionally
taken to symbolize the arrival of justice, and a long, almost
agonizing build-up of scales in the stringed instruments, the
second theme returns to bring the piece triumphantly to a close.
Beethovens Fourth Piano Concerto was the last one Beethoven
himself premiered publicly. He had begun his adult career in the
1790s largely as a concert pianist in Vienna, amazing his listeners
with his remarkable energy and ability to improvise. Facing his
growing deafness, which he hid from the public, he progressively
retired from concert life starting in 1802 and devoted himself
to compositiona task which he carried out with almost superhuman
devotion.
Beethovens music from this period has typically been
labeled heroic, partly due to the courage and determination
it conveys, and partly as a reference to his great Third Symphony
(the so-called Eroica)which he initially dedicated
to Napoleon, a dedication he crossed out on the score upon hearing
in 1804 that Napoleon had had himself crowned emperor in Paris.
In this context, the concertos intimate character was
quite striking. The first movement (part of the concerto) dispenses
with the traditional orchestral introduction, with the piano playing
the main melody alone. The trend towards alternating between the
piano playing alone and the orchestra playing alone is particularly
marked in the second movementBiss and the orchestra created
a very special moment at the end, when soloist and orchestra finally
play together. The last movement is a smooth, somewhat understated
rondo (quick, repetitive piece based on a catchy melody).
Biss seems a talented pianist, with a sure sense of timing
and a light touch that produces fluid, glistening scales and passage
work. This reviewerwho confesses to a limited acquaintance
with Beethovens piano musicwill simply add that he
would be happy to hear Biss play again.
The other half of the concert consisted of two pieces by Debussy
and Ravel, the greatest representatives of musical Impressionism.
Neither composer liked the term, but it stuck nonetheless because
it so aptly described the sensations provoked in the listener
by their daring new harmonies, masterful use of tone color, and
shimmering lyricism. Moreover, like the Impressionist painters
before them, their brilliant innovations met with derision and
hostility from the French bourgeois press and artistic establishment.
Though hardly a political leftist, Debussys musical career
was a product of the 1871 Paris Communethe worlds
first workers government, which sprang up amid the defeat
of French emperor Napoleon III in his war against Prussia, after
which the Prussian army besieged Paris. The Commune was ultimately
crushed by French government troops, as the Prussian army stood
aside. Tens of thousands of Parisians were executed and many more
jailed or deported.
Debussys father, Manuel-Achille, met Charles de Sivry
when both were in Satory prison for having fought for the Commune.
Having had some lessons from an Italian violinist in southern
France while a refugee from the war, the young Claude took piano
lessons from Sivrys mother, Mme. Mauté de Fleurvillethe
mother-in-law of the famous poet, Paul Verlaine, and reportedly
a former student of Frédéric Chopin. Only a year
later, at age 10, Debussy managed the feat of being accepted to
the Paris National Conservatory in pianowhile his family,
still deprived of family and civil rights, was living
in a tiny two-room apartment in north Paris.
Debussy was a rebellious pupil, whose unorthodox writing frustrated
his harmony and counterpoint professors. He struggled to find
his own style and was forced to write according to traditional
rules to compete in the Prix de Rome competition, the highest
musical distinction at the time, which gave winners a stipend
to study in Rome. After returning from Rome in 1887, he attended
poet Stéphane Mallarmés Tuesday dinners, meeting
much of the Parisian artistic avant-garde, and heard Javanese
gamelan music at the 1889 Universal Exposition in Paris. One of
the first works of his mature style, the 1894 Prelude to the
Afternoon of a Faun, is based on a Mallarmé poem.
Debussys music was initially much criticized in the press,
but his popularity with audiences gradually won over press critics
during the 1890s and early 1900s. Despite an unsuccessful premiere,
La Mer soon established itself as a major piece in the
orchestral repertoire; it is one of this reviewers childhood
favorites.
In the first movement, fragments of melody in harp, winds,
and string tremolos coalesce into the rolling first theme, initially
stated in the clarinets and horns; the second theme, starting
as a chorale by the cellos, metamorphosizes as it moves around
the orchestra, ending as a brass fanfare that builds to a roar
and then vanishes. The second movement consists of a series of
running melodies, passed between the strings, winds (particularly
the English horn), building to a climax, which dies away with
muted trumpet then flute over harps and strings. The final movement
starts with a storm that moves from the cellos to the brass, then
calms down to a remarkably sensual flute and oboe solo over low
strings and violin harmonics, and picks up strength again, ending
in a thunderclap from the timpani.
The final piece on the program, Ravels La Valse,
was first sketched the year after La Mers first performance,
but was not finished until 1920. A felicitous composer of waltzes,
notably with his 1911 Valses Nobles et Sentimentales, Ravel
had planned La Valse (WienVienna) as a tribute
to the great Viennese composer of waltzes, Johann Strauss. However,
between the first sketches of the piece and its completion lay
the shattering experience of World War I.
Ravel was horrified by the war, in which he served as a truck
driver, including at Verdun. He found it difficult to compose
afterwards. During the war, he wrote letters opposing the boycott
of German or Austro-Hungarian music in concerts in France. Afterwards,
though an intensely private and reserved individual, he did not
shrink from bitter criticism of French imperialism. In one song
of his 1925 Chansons madécasses cycle, Méfiez-vous
des blancs (Beware the whites), a native of Madagascarthen
a French colonycriticizes whites for building forts and
massacring natives with cannon-fire, then explains that all the
whites have been exterminated by storms and poisoned winds.
In its program notes for La Valse, the Chicago Symphony
notes: Fate now made the waltz a bitter reminder of a vanished
era.... Due to widespread famine, in 1918 the official daily food
rations [in Vienna] were 5.8 ounces of bread, 1.2 ounces of flour,
1.6 ounces of meat, 0.175 ounces of fat, 0.9 ounces of sugar,
and 2.45 ounces of potatoes per person. That year, a flu epidemic
broke out, killing the painter Gustav Klimt, the architect Otto
Wagner, and Freuds daughter Sophie.
In the score to La Valse, Ravel wrote that it described
an imperial court circa 1855; he later commented that
the piece inspired in him the impression of a fantastical
and fatal twirling. It is, in fact, not so much a picture
of the waltz as of a world coming apart.
It is a tribute to Ravels art that he was able to create
such an effect with an intensely beautiful piece of music. La
Valse has all the typical strengths of Ravels music:
taut formal structure, acidic harmonies and thrilling rhythmic
drive. However, it is far from a normal, graceful waltz: double
basses, brass, and percussion make odd interjections, the melody
passes to unusual tone colors (bass clarinets, contrabassoons,
violins playing in high positions on low strings to produce a
husky sound, etc.), and rhythm gets dangerously unbalanced. The
piece feels like it is always about to burst out of control.
La Valse begins with bassoons and bass clarinets playing
snippets of waltz music over a rhythmic accompaniment in the double
basses. It moves into a series of waltzes based on the initial
melodic fragments, often interrupted by suspiciously military-sounding
snare drums and bass drum rolls. These waltzes build to a climax,
after which the piece briefly returns to the initial bassoon and
bass clarinet melodies. This time, however, the build-up is far
more abrupt; the orchestra picks up speed, gusts of sound tear
through the music, the downbeat disappears briefly, and the piece
ends with five accented notes screamed by the entire orchestra
in unison.
Videos of some of the pieces mentioned in this article are
available on YouTube:
Beethoven: Symphony #3
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFltqVS8d9I
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVQtcd0clu4
Debussy: La Mer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1OFT8fBLQt4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yj9c8XCd4CE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7F8_K2llfY
Ravel: La Valse
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MmboDwY7Sas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TGn5hZYis6s
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