Overture Magazine 2013-2014 March-April 2014 | Page 22

{ Program Notes finale to the orchestra so that “at least I can wipe the sweat off my brow” after the daunting solo cadenza that concludes the third movement. Defying first-movement conventions, movement one is a quiet, meditative Nocturne. It gradually rises from the lower depths of orchestra and violin, though dark instrumental colors will be emphasized throughout. This is profoundly melancholy, even anguished music: an aria for violin with the soloist as a lonely insomniac singing to a sleeping, indifferent world. Darkest woodwinds — clarinets with bass clarinet, bassoon with contrabassoon— paint deep shadows around her. The bleak ending, with tolling harp and celesta accompanying the soloist floating on a fragile high harmonic note, is unforgettable. The savage second-movement Scherzo is a Fellini-esque circus of the absurd. “Scherzo” means “joke,” and this is a harshly sarcastic joke indeed. This mood is so common in Shostakovich that it seems the composer’s mocking, selfprotective response to the regime he lived under. And in fact, we hear his famous signature motive DSCH: the notes D, S (the German designation for E-flat), C and H (German usage for B-natural). About a minute into the movement, a malicious-sounding ensemble of woodwinds mocks the violinist with this motive, and later the violinist bitterly echoes it. The beleaguered soloist flies through a crazed, driven dance of exacting virtuosity. As he would in other major works, Shostakovich turned to the Baroque passacaglia form for his powerful Fminor third movement, the Concerto’s emotional center. The passacaglia is a repeating melodic-harmonic pattern, usually in the bass. Shostakovich’s theme, which we hear at the outset in cellos and basses accented by timpani, is 17 measures long and broken into choppy two-measure phrases. Gradually this pattern travels through the orchestra; even the soloist eventually takes it up in fierce doublestopped octaves. Over it, the soloist and other instruments weave heartbreakingly expressive melodies. The movement concludes with one of the longest and most taxing (both physically and emotionally) 20 O v ertur e | www. bsomusic .org cadenzas ever written for a violinist; it is almost a movement in itself and constitutes the soloist’s commentary on the entire concerto. This cadenza gradually accelerates into the final movement. The spirit of mockery returns in the Allegro con brio finale, titled “Burlesca.” But here the mood seems less bitter than earlier: more a wild folk dance over a driving rhythmic ostinato. Midway, the passacaglia theme makes a brief, mocking appearance in clarinet, horn, and the hard-edged clatter of xylophone. Again, shrill woodwinds dominate this finale, while the soloist hurtles through a nonstop display of virtuosity, culminating in a final acceleration to Presto. Instrumentation: Three flutes, piccolo, three oboes, English horn, three clarinets, bass clarinet, three bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp, celeste and strings. His swan song, Symphonic Dances is a retrospective work that sums up Rachmaninoff’s musical and personal philosophy. Symphonic Dances, opus 45 Sergei Rachmaninoff By NM