ESO Programme Notes Online- Mendelssohn: Hebrides Overture and Symphony no. 3 “Scottish”

Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)

Performance: September 27, 2013 (details here) 

Overture- “The Hebrides” (“Fingal’s Cave”), opus 26

Symphony no. 3 in A minor, “Scottish”, opus 56

 

Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy

In 1829, the twenty year-old Felix Mendelssohn was already a major international figure. As a teenager his precocity had far exceeded even that of Mozart.  He had already completed a collection of works that were staggering in their originality and maturity, including the First Symphony, written when he was just 15, the Octet for Strings, completed at age 16 and the Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream, finished a year later. Early in 1829, his twentieth year, he famously revived the music of J. S. Bach, organizing and conducting a history-changing performance of the St Matthew Passion in Berlin- the first time the complete work had been heard since Bach’s death over sixty years earlier.

 

That summer, Mendelssohn made the first of many trips to the United Kingdom, conducting a performance of his First Symphony with the London Philharmonic Society, and performing extensively as a solo pianist (his performance of Beethoven’s “Emperor” Concerto was the first time London audiences had seen a pianist perform it by memory). After such a busy and successful year, Mendelssohn stayed on in the UK for some sightseeing and relaxation. He made his way to Edinburgh, a city he quickly came to love:

 

“Everything here looks so stern and robust, half enveloped in a haze of smoke or fog. Many Highlanders came in costume from church victoriously leading their sweethearts in their Sunday attire and casting magnificent and important looks over the world; with long, red beards, tartan plaids, bonnets and feathers and naked knees and their bagpipes in their hands, they passed along by the half-ruined gray castle on the meadow where Mary Stuart lived in splendour.”

Holyrood Palace c 1649

After another day of sightseeing at Holyrood Chapel on the 30th of July, 1829, we wrote this famous letter:

 

“In the evening twilight we went today to the palace where Mary lived and loved. A little room is shown there with a winding staircase leading up to the door. This is the staircase the murderers ascended, and, finding Rizzio [Mary‟s Italian advisor and, probably, lover, whom the Scots mistrusted] .. drew him out; about three chambers away is a small corner where they killed him. The chapel close to it is now roofless, grass and ivy grow there, and at the broken altar Mary was crowned Queen of England. Everything around is broken and moldering and the bright sky shines in. I believe I have found today in that old chapel the beginning of my Scottish symphony.”

Ruins of the nave at Holyrood Abbey

 

Later that day, he sketched out sixteen measures of music that were to become the introductory melody of the Third Symphony.  The work he began that evening would take a further thirteen years to reach its final form.

Meanwhile, just a week later Mendelssohn made his way north to Fingal’s Cave, where there followed another short sketch. Soon after, work began in earnest on what now known as the “Hebrides” Overture. Mendelssohn originally called the piece “The Lonely Island,” adopting the title we know now when he revised the work in 1832. The “Hebrides” is more of a tone-poem than an “overture” in the traditional sense. Rather than preparing the listener for a performance of an opera or play, it paints a vivid musical portrait of the remote cave, the stormy seas that surround it and the tone poet’s sense of loneliness and solitude.

Mendelssohn’s Scottish overture was complete, but what of the symphony he had begun a week earlier? By 1831, it seemed as if inspiration was fading, Mendelssohn reporting to a friend that he could not “find his way back into the Scottish fog mood,” and the idea receded farther and farther from the forefront of his mind. A decade passed before he returned to work on his A minor symphony, a decade in which he completed his three other symphonies, two piano concertos and four string quartets.

Finally, in 1841, he began work in earnest on the A minor “Scottish Symphony,” returning to that sketch made in 1829. By September he had completed the first two movements and was hard at work on the Adagio. Mendelssohn completed the work on the 20th of January, 1842, and conducted the first performance at the Gewandhaus in Leipzig on the 3rd of March. The work was rapturously received, but Mendelssohn had concerns about the piece, and made major and radical revisions before the second performance just two weeks later, on 17 March in Berlin. In June, he conducted the work in London. The success of this performance emboldened Mendelssohn to ask Queen Victoria’s permission to dedicate the work to her. Permission was duly granted, and Mendelssohn became her favourite composer for life.

Although the work had been a success in each of these early performances, Mendelssohn made one final round of major cuts and revisions before the work was published by Breitkopf in the fall of 1842.

The final version of this work was published as his “Third Symphony,” but it was actually the last of his five symphonies, and many consider it his greatest. It is in many ways the most serious in tone, and his most sophisticated in construction, with the whole symphony evolving organically from the possibilities of that sixteen bar sketch written in 1829. Critics and musicians have argued at length about just how “Scottish” the work is: although Mendelssohn regularly referred to the A minor Symphony as his “Scottish,” he conspicuously omitted any reference to Scotland from the publish score. Some have found numerous references to Scottish folk themes in the score (there is a famous instance of the so-called “Scottish snap” rhythm in the Scherzo), but Mendelssohn himself was no fan of folk music. “No national music for me!” he proclaimed. “Infamous, vulgar, out-of-tune trash…. It is distracting and has given me a toothache already,” he wrote. Even before his visit in 1829, Mendelssohn had hoped that the trip would inspire a Scottish piece or two “since I greatly love the sea from the mainland and even want to use it in a symphony with Scottish bagpipes.” After his visit, however, his enthusiasm for the pipes had decidedly waned, writing that “Scottish bagpipes, Swiss cow-horns, Welsh harps, all playing the Huntsmen’s Chorus with hideously improvised variations then their beautiful singing in the hall, altogether their music is beyond conception.”

What did make its way into the score was a deeply felt impression of the mystery and darkness of that visit to Holyrood; “”It is in pictures, ruins and natural surroundings that I find the most music.”

Mendelssohn specified in the first edition of the score that the four movements of the piece, all of which are thematically interconnected, must be played without pause. The prevailing mood of the first movement is dark indeed, from the slow opening in which the divided violas state the “Holyrood” theme into the main Allegro, which begins broodingly and then becomes decidedly stormy and violent. Mendelssohn placed the Scherzo second in this symphony, rather than in the traditional spot before the Finale. It is in this movement that one is most likely to find hints of folk music. Unlike most scherzos and minuets, it’s in duple rather than triple meter, and is in sonata-allegro form rather than structured as a dance. This helps make the movement feel more like a hopeful answer to the tragedies of the first movement, rather than a mere diversion. The Adagio which follows it is one of Mendelssohn’s greatest creations, and certainly one of the great symphonic slow movements. Although written in A major, the overall mood is deeply serious and often tragic, with a climactic central funeral march perhaps harkening back to the example of the Marcia funebre of Beethoven’s Eroica Symphony. Mendelssohn had originally labelled the final Allegro vicacissimo as Allegro guerriero and it is decidedly warlike in character.

 

 

ESO at Christ Church- Tamsin Waley-Cohen Thrills with Tchaikovsky

November  22, 2013
Christ Church, Malvern

 

Violinist Tamsin Waley-Cohen

 

Kenneth Woods– conductor
Tchaikovsky- Andante Cantabile  (arr. 1st Quartet)
Shostakovich- Chamber Symphony opus 83a (arr. 4th Quartet)
-interval-
Tchaikovsky- Violin Concerto
Tamsin Waley-Cohen– violin

 

Our 2013 Christ Church Season comes to a thrilling conclusion with an evening of Russian masterworks and a guest appearance from on of Britain’s most talented and charismatic violinists. Tchaikovsky’s widely-loved Violin Concerto is a work full of optimism, passion and high spirits, from the epic first movement, to the humorous and staggeringly virtuosic finale. With its endless abundance of melody and thrilling violin writing, it’s hard to imagine how much trouble it gave its creator. The Concerto was conceived and composed in a period of profound personal crisis, just after Tchaikovsky’s disastrously failed marriage in 1878, and after it was completed, Tchaikovsky suffered seemingly endless setbacks in trying to get the work performed, with its dedicatee calling it “unplayable” and later making myriad unwarranted cuts and changes. Such a difficult birth is hard to fathom for those of us who know it as one of the most beloved works in the repertoire. Like Tchaikovsky, Shostakovich excelled in an usual breadth of musical genres, and always seemed able to tap into the spirit of folk music. In fact, his Fourth String Quartet was composed “for the drawer” with no possibility of immediate performance during the Stalinist repression of the post-WW II Soviet Union. A generation later, Shostakovich’s friend and student Rudolf Barshai orchestrated the work as the Chamber Symphony opus 83a- it’s a communicative and moving masterpiece that ranges from spooky stasis to tragic grandeur.

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Musical America news piece on ESO

Reblogged from Musical America (subscriber access only)

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

English Symphony Names Principal Conductor

August 6, 2013

American-born conductor KENNETH WOODS is to be the new principal conductor of the English Symphony/English String Orchestra, a Worcestershire-based ensemble founded as a string orchestra in 1978 by William Boughton. He succeeds Vernon “Tod” Handley, in the post until his death in 2008.

The orchestra has about a 15-concert season in its home base of Malvern, but tours regularly and is active in community outreach and education, providing music classes and playing in hospitals. Its motto is “Music for Everyone.”

“My colleagues in the ESO do the work they do in schools, care homes, hospices, and on youth orchestra courses because they believe in it,” said Woods. “What could be more exciting for a conductor than to work with colleagues who want to be there?”

Woods arrived in 2012 as artistic director. His new post represents a promotion.

His background includes the National Endowment for the Arts Rural Residency Program, in which he was as cellist in the Taliesin Trio in Mississippi County, Arkansas, one of the nation’s poorest. He was also music director of the Oregon East Symphony in Pendleton, Oregon. He has described the group as “the most remotely situated full symphony orchestra on the planet.” The orchestra was particularly notable for its “Redneck” Mahler cycle.

Woods has also guest conducted frequently.

Kenneth Woods appointed Principal Conductor of English Symphony Orchestra

KENNETH WOODS UPS TO PRINCIPAL CONDUCTOR OF

ENGLISH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Photo-Benjamin Ealovega
Photo-Benjamin Ealovega

 

UPDATED- Please see additional coverage of the announcement from

Kenneth Woods, who was appointed Artistic Director of the English Symphony Orchestra‘s new Malvern-based subscription series in December 2012, has been promoted by the Worcestershire-based orchestra to the post of Principal Conductor. The American-born, Cardiff-based Woods becomes the orchestra’s first principal conductor since the passing of Vernon Handley in 2008.

“We started exploring possibilities with Ken towards the end of last year, asking him to curate the Malvern concert series during 2013, at the end of which we planned to take stock,” comments the ESO’s CEO Peter Sheeran. “In the event, his involvement with the different elements that make up the ESO has been a shot in the arm for us and we see every reason to bring forward his appointment. We are announcing our new season next month and want to have Ken at the forefront of it.”

Woods comes to the ESO following a highly successful tenure as Principal Guest Conductor of the Orchestra of the Swan, with whom he has made an acclaimed series of recordings of the symphonies of Hans Gál and Robert Schumann, earning the orchestra its first “Gramophone Editor’s Choice.” Numerous other plaudits have brought OOTS to the attention of a new global audience, with coverage from The New York Times, Washington Post, National Public Radio in the United States and BBC Radio 3 and Radio 4 in the UK, among others.

Ken’s passion for taking music to all kinds of listeners and venues is very much in line with the ESO’s motto of “Music for Everyone.” He embraces the future of both the ESO’s concert and community projects with equal enthusiasm. “My colleagues in the ESO do the work they do in schools, care homes, hospices and on youth orchestra courses because they believe in it. The musicians have stayed loyal to the orchestra through the years because, as many of them have told me, it’s the orchestra they want to play in” said Woods. “What could be more exciting for a conductor than to work with colleagues who want to be there, who believe in everything the orchestra is doing?”

Ken’s admirable work in bringing classical music to rural and under-served communities began in his native America through the National Endowment for the Arts Rural Residency Program, where as cellist of the Taliesin Trio he set up a dynamic chamber music program in Mississippi County, Arkansas, part of the poorest congressional district in the United States. He previously served as Music Director of the Oregon East Symphony in the small  rodeo town of Pendleton, Oregon, an orchestra once described as “the most remotely situated full symphony orchestra on the planet.” With the OES, Ken not only developed the orchestra’s concert activities through a highly-praised “Redneck” Mahler cycle, numerous premieres, commissions, regional tours and composer residencies, but also co-founded a multifaceted educational program called “Playing for Keeps,” comprising two training orchestras, a children’s chorus, a summer music camp, regular youth concerts and support for private instrumental lessons and instrument rental.

Ken’s resume includes guest conducting with the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, State of Mexico Symphony and National Symphony Orchestra (Washington D.C.), and appearances at the Aspen, Scotia and Round Top music festivals. He has recorded with Northern Sinfonia and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and in August makes his first recording with the English Chamber Orchestra. An eloquent communicator, Ken has been heard frequently on the BBC, most recently taking part in the BBC Proms Literary Festival discussing A Mahler Anthology, a selection of readings about the composer, including letters, reviews and biographies. His widely read and respected blog A View from the Podium, is one of the 25 most read classical music blogs.

Details of the English Symphony Orchestra’s 2013-14 season will be announced in early September, and will include a number of exciting initiatives, including debut performances in new venues and the appointment of a composer-in-association. The English Symphony Orchestra’s autumn season opens on September 27th at Christ Church in Malvern, with Woods conducting a programme featuring the music of Mendelssohn and the Concerto for Cello and Strings by Hans Gál.

* * * * *

All media enquiries, interview and image requests: Melanne Mueller,melanne@musiccointernational.com,  +44 (0) 20 8698 6933 or +1 917 907 2785

To learn more about Kenneth Woods visit http://kennethwoods.net.

To learn more about the English Symphony Orchestra visit www.eso.co.uk

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

September 27, 2013

Mendelssohn “Hebrides” Overture 

Gal Concertino for Cello and Strings

Matthew Sharp cello

Mendelssohn Symphony No. 3, “Scottish”  

November  22, 2013

Tchaikovsky Andante Cantabile  (arr. from String Quartet No. 1)

Shostakovich Chamber Symphony, Op. 83a (arr. from String Quartet No. 4)

Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto

Tamsin Waley-Cohen violin

Featured CD of the Week- John Joubert, Tempus Perdu

A rare non-Nimbus ESO recording (made in 1997), a wonderful disc of the music of John Joubert

 

Temps PerduTemps Perdu, Sinfonietta, The Instant Moment

English Symphony Orchestra, conducted by William Boughton, with Henry Herford (baritone)
BMS 419CD (1997)

“Music of real distinction … a memorable creation indeed”

Andrew Achenbach, Gramophone, October 1997

“This disc was issued to celebrate John Joubert’s seventieth birthday in 1997, and features première recordings of Temps Perdu — Variations for String Orchestra, the Sinfonietta, and The Instant Moment. These are taut, well-constructed works, full of a very English melancholy and wistfulness … The song-cycle The Instant Moment, which concludes the disc, is a powerful work sung well by Henry Herford. This is strong and heady stuff, in committed and sincere performances by the English String Orchestra and William Boughton.”

Albion Magazine Online, Spring 2010

“The string work and the Sinfonietta immediately leap to the very front order of such works in 20th-century Great Britain — a highly competitive field with the likes of pieces by Holst, Finzi, Vaughan Williams, Bridge, Britten, Tippett, and more. They are simply exquisite. As one might imagine from the Proustian title, Temps Perdu: Variations for String Orchestra is drenched in a marvellous sense of expectancy, yearning, and nostalgia. It is written with great refinement, and I have fallen in love with it. The Sinfonietta is another gem, with echoes of Sibelius floating through the first of its three movements. Having heard the Toccata disk, the superlative quality of Joubert’s settings of five D.H. Lawrence poems in The Instant Moment was no surprise. Committed performances by the English String Orchestra and baritone Henry Herford, under conductor William Boughton, make this disk indispensable to any collection of British music.”

R.R. Reilly (www.insidecatholic.com) April 2010

MusicWeb International reviews: October 2003

Reaction: ESO at Christchurch Malvern- Ullmann, Mozart and Beethoven

It was a great evening for music when the ESO, Kenneth Woods and Christopher Richards took the stage together for the first time as the orchestra launched our new series in Christ Church Malvern.

Picture by Benjamin Ealovega
Picture by Benjamin Ealovega

Read all about it from ESO Chief Executive Peter Sheeran at Music Out Of Worcester here, and get a behind the scenes look at how it all came together from artistic director Kenneth Woods here.

Where you there? Please write to info@eso.co.uk to share your thoughts and reactions, or leave a comment below. We welcome your feedback!

An article for the Malvern Gazette submitted by Christ Church

ESO COMES TO CHRIST CHURCH

We were both thrilled, proud  and privileged on Friday evening when the ESO performed the first  of their inaugural concerts and are honoured that they have chosen us as their venue. It was also Kenneth Woods’ first concert in association  with the ESO, the  conductor for this series of concerts.  The cold weather did not deter the audience of over  a  hundred and the warmth and intimacy of the Church made for a very special evening. There was a varied and carefully thought out programme   which had promised to be exciting and it was! There was the poignancy of the Ullmann Chamber Symphony Opus 46a. and the beauty of the Mozart Clarinet Concerto, when soloist Chris Richard made his clarinet” sing like a bird” .Finally a thrilling conclusion –  the powerful Beethoven’s Symphony No 2 Opus 21, a veritable feast for the senses. The orchestra gave it their all, only the kitchen sink was missing!  The atmosphere was both  intimate and “buzzing”  rather like being in your own drawing room. The acoustics were much praised and the audience gave a tremendous reaction to the concert, even commenting we were like a mini Glyndebourne. Someone said “When was the last time these walls heard  live Beethoven”.  Exciting times are ahead , three more concerts planned the next being Thursday 23rd May 2013  at 7.30 where we will hear a programme of the best of British music , including Arne, Britten, Boyce, Finzi and Arnold. Please see our web site for full detailswww.christchurch-malvern.org.uk and you can book at ESO Box Office  01386 791044

Palm Sunday saw the launch of our new Christ Church Magazine, Christ Church News and we have much planned for the remainder of 2013. Next up is our Spring Fair on Saturday 20th April from 10.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. note your diary to come and browse our varied stalls and enjoy our fabulous bacon, egg and sausage sandwiches for breakfast or and  early lunch , all produce supplied from our local Barnard’s Green Butchers.  But before then join us Good Friday for our Devotional Hour  2.00 to 3.00 p.m.with Canon Harold Goddard and again on Easter Sunday at 11.00 a.m. for Holy Communion conducted by Canon Goddard.

 

And here’s a letter from a listener submitted to the paper

 

Dear Sir,

I am sure I speak for all those who attended the ESO concert in Christ Church last Friday when I say we were absolutely transported by the wonderful playing. Experienced concertgoers I spoke to said they had not heard a more sensitive performance of the Mozart Clarinet Concerto, and the Beethoven absolutely ‘crackled’.

The ESO appear to have found a treasure in Kenneth Woods, their artistic director for this series, who conveyed his enthusiasm through his words to the audience as well as his baton. His rapport with the orchestra was self-evident, as was the excellent Christ Church acoustic which seems to be made for them.

This is the first joint venture between these forces, which promises great things for the rest of the season, and hopefully for others to follow. I cannot commend them too highly.

Peter B

Malvern

 

The next concert in the series is coming up soon! May 24th- mark your calendars!

____________________________________________________________

 

Title: ESO at Christchurch Malvern- Ullmann, Mozart and Beethoven
Location: Christ Church, Malvern
Description: Kenneth Woods- conductor
Ullmann (arr. Woods)- Chamber Symphony opus 46a
Mozart- Clarinet Concerto
Chris Richards, clarinet
Interval
Beethoven- Symphony no. 2

 

Clarinetist Christopher Richards
Clarinetist Christopher Richards

Start Time: 19:30
Date: 2013-03-22

 

The limpid lyricism of Mozart’s beloved Clarinet Concerto, the virtuosic good humour of Beethoven’s Second Symphony and the defiant heroism of Ullmann’s Chamber Symphony.

The ESO is proud to begin  our new series at Christ Church, Malvern with the first professional UK performance of Viktor Ullmann’s Chamber Symphony, opus 43 a- an arrangement of his Third String Quartet by conductor Kenneth Woods.

Christopher Richards, recently appointed as Principal Clarinet of the London Symphony is possibly England’s most exciting young exponent of the instrument, and his performance of the Mozart Clarinet Concerto promises to be truly magical.

Beethoven’s Second Symphony is a virtuoso tour de force for any orchestra, and promises a thrilling conclusion to a historic evening of music making.

 

Kenneth Woods appointed Artistic Director of ESO Malvern concert series

 

Kenneth Woods has been appointed Artistic Director of the English Symphony Orchestra’s new subscription concert series for 2013.  His first concert in the new role will take place on 22 March 2013, in Christ Church Malvern.

The English Symphony Orchestra, founded in 1978, has not had an artistic director since the 2008 passing of Vernon Handley, who was appointed Principal Conductor in 2007. Woods joins an orchestra with an illustrious history which includes associations with Sir Yehudi Menuhin, notable soloists such as Stephen Isserlis and Nigel Kennedy, and renowned composers including Sir Michael Tippett and Nicholas Maw. The ESO has made dozens of acclaimed recordings, a notable discography which Woods is expected to augment.

Woods remarks, “The ESO is a world-class group of musicians, with an august history of recording and touring at the highest level. Their administrative team has worked incredibly hard to put the orchestra’s finances back on a very strong footing, while developing an enterprising, innovative and wide-ranging education and outreach portfolio. It’s an exciting moment for the orchestra to be returning to their historic home of Malvern with their first new subscription series in some time, and I’m very excited they’ve asked me to partner with them in this new venture.”

Peter Sheeran, Chief Executive of the English Symphony Orchestra adds, “I first met Ken Woods a few months ago, together with the ESO’s leader Michael Bochmann, to explore how we might work together. We discussed plans, ethics and motivation, and we found that Ken was unusually well-attuned to what we are trying to achieve and that very little had to be spelt out. An opportunity came to put on a concert series at a new venue for us, with very exciting possibilities both on the platform and in its community, and Ken was the obvious person to ask to curate this project during its first year, with other possibilities leading out from that. We cannot wait to get down to work with him in January; his approach came at just the right time for us.”

Woods’ programming for his first season with the ESO ranges from 18th-century England to 20th-century Russia, with the repertoire united by a common thread. “My colleagues in the orchestra and I wanted this series to make a statement, to articulate a theme,” says Woods. “We’ve picked the Granddaddy of all themes – resiliency. We’re going to be looking at the way in which music and art seeks light in dark times, though defiance, humour, struggle, meditation, perseverance or heroic striving.”

Woods’ first concert with the ESO includes his own arrangement of Victor Ullman’s Chamber Symphony (originally composed as his third and final string quartet), written in Terezin just prior to his execution in Auschwitz; Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto, which was the composer’s last completed instrumental work, responding to illness and crisis with search for tranquillity; and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 2, perhaps his most light-hearted symphony, but written concurrently with his Heiligenstadt Testament, when he was seriously contemplating suicide because of his deafness.Future programmes feature works by Arne, Malcolm Arnold, Boyce, Britten, Finzi, Gál, Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky and Shostakovich.

Woods’ appointment as Artistic Director of the English Symphony Orchestra caps a climatic year for the fast-rising conductor. As Principal Guest Conductor of Stratford-upon-Avon-based Orchestra of the Swan, he has captured international recognition for his ongoing series of performances and recordings pairing the symphonies of Hans Gál and Robert Schumann. His world-premiere recordings of the Gál symphonies have been cited by National Public Radio, The New York Times, The Washington Post, the BBC and The Guardian’s international edition, among others. Also with Orchestra of the Swan, Woods conducted an acclaimed all-British programme at London’s Cadogan Hall, and recorded the world-premieres of two fusion concertos for the release Spring Sounds, Spring Seas, recently selected as one of MusicWeb International’s Records of the Year. Other recording highlights in 2012 included his first disc for Signum and two recordings for Somm Recordings with Orchestra of the Swan and the Royal Philharmonic, following on from his highly successful Somm recording of Schoenberg’s arrangements of the songs of Gustav Mahler.

As Artistic Director of the English Symphony Orchestra, Woods can be expected to lend the many strings of his bow to the organisation. In addition to his prowess on the podium and in the recording studio, Woods is a cellist of significant stature. This past year, with his Ensemble Epomeo, he recorded the complete string trios of Gal and Krasa, a Critic’s Choice in the December issue of Gramophone Magazine, and was soloist in Brahms’ Double Concerto with the Surrey Mozart Players alongside violinist Suzanne Casey.

A prolific writer, Woods is widely-read on his blog, A View from the Podium, one of today’s top 20 classical music blogs. He has contributed liner notes to a number of releases including EMI’s ICON reissue, a 20-CD box set devoted to German conductor Eugen Jochum. And he has guest-blogged for Gramophone magazine. As an arranger, Woods’ orchestral version of Ullman’s String Quartet No. 3 has been recorded by David Parry and the English Chamber Orchestra for the Gramola label. As a broadcaster, Woods was heard on BBC Radio 3′s The Cellists that Time Forgot, hosted by Julian Lloyd Webber.
To learn more about Kenneth Woods visit http://kennethwoods.net.

CONCERT INFORMATION

22 March 2013

Ullmann Chamber Symphony, Op. 43a

Mozart Clarinet Concerto

Beethoven Symphony No. 2

 

24 May 2013

English Music Festival

Arne Symphony No. 1

Britten Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings

Boyce Symphony No. 8

Finzi Dies Natalis

Arnold Sinfonietta No. 2

John Andrews guest conductor

 

27 September 2013

Mendelssohn ”Hebrides” Overture

Gal Concertino for Cello and Strings

Matthew Sharp cello

Mendelssohn Symphony No. 3, “Scottish”

 

22 November 2013

Tchaikovsky Andante Cantabile  (arr. from String Quartet No. 1)

Shostakovich Chamber Symphony Op. 83a (arr. from String Quartet No. 4)

Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto

All media inquiries, image and interview requests please contact Melanne Mueller, melanne@musiccointernational.com, +44 (0) 20 8542 4866 or +1 917 907 2785

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Ullmann Chamber Symphony

The first concert of the new ESO Christ Church series begins with a performance of Viktor Ullmann’s Chamber Symphony. Learn more about Ullmann at the Music and the Holocaust website here, or at the Orel Foundation website here.

Viktor-Ullmann
Composer Viktor Ullmann

PROGAMME NOTE

Viktor Ullmann- String Quartet No. 3

(arr. for string orchestra by Kenneth Woods)

Viktor Ullmann’s String Quartet no. 3 was completed on January 18, 1943, in the final part of a career that began with him acknowledged as one of the great hopes of German musical life, and ended in his murder at the hands of racist fanatics.

In his early career, he studied and apprenticed under Schoenberg and Zemlinsky, and his early works, especially his Schoenberg Variations op 3a (1926), attracted attention throughout Europe. A passionate humanitarian with a deep interest in literature, culture and philosophy, Ullmann took a partial hiatus from composition to study the anthroposophical philosophy of Rudolf Steiner. In 1932 he and his second wife bought a bookshop in Stuttgart where they traded primarily in books on philosophy and humanism.  Only months after the purchase of the bookstore, Hitler seized power and the Ullmanns fled to Prague.

In 1933 he began work on his most significant piece to date, an opera that would eventually become “The Fall of the Antichrist,” a work he completed in 1935.  This masterpiece would be the crowning achievement of his pre-war years, and yet it was to be the events of World War II that would spur him on to his very greatest artistic accomplishments.

Ullmann was deported to the Theresienstadt ghetto outside Prague in 1942. He was one of a handful of extraordinary creative geniuses in the ghetto, including the composers Gideon Klein, Pavel Haas and Hans Krasa. Never a particularly prolific composer in his earlier years, Ullmann composed a stunning volume of work during the two years he was in Theresienstadt, including piano sonatas, chamber music and a second opera, “The Emperor of Atlantis.”

Just hours before being deported to Auschwitz on October 16, 1944 some friends convinced him to leave his compositions behind.  It is believed Viktor Ullmann was murdered in the gas chamber at Auschwitz on October 18, 1944.

‘For me Theresienstadt has been, and remains, an education in form. Previously, when one did not feel the weight and pressure of material life, because modern conveniences – those wonders of civilization – had dispelled them, it was easy to create beautiful forms. Here where matter has to be overcome through form even in daily life, where everything of an artistic nature is the very antithesis of one’s environment – here, true mastery lies in seeing, with Schiller, that the secret of the art-work lies in the eradication of matter through form: which is presumably, indeed, the mission of man altogether, not only of aesthetic man but also of ethical man.

“All that I would stress is that Theresienstadt has helped, not hindered, me in my musical work, that we certainly did not sit down by the waters of Babylon and weep, and that our desire for culture was matched by our desire for life; and I am convinced that all those who have striven, in life and in art, to wrest form from resistant matter will bear me out.’
            ~ Viktor Ullmann, 1944

(aus Goethe und Ghetto: „Theresienstadt war und ist für mich Schule der Form. Früher, wo man Wucht und Last des stofflichen Lebens nicht fühlte, weil der Komfort, diese Magie der Zivilisation, sie verdrängte, war es leicht, die schöne Form zu schaffen. Hier, wo man auch im täglichen Leben den Stoff durch die Form zu überwinden hat, wo alles Musische in vollem Gegensatz zur Umwelt steht: Hier ist die wahre Meisterschule… Ich habe in Theresienstadt ziemlich viel neue Musik geschrieben, meist um den Bedürfnissen und Wünschen von Dirigenten, Regisseuren, Pianisten, Sängern und damit den Bedürfnissen der Freizeitgestaltung des Ghettos zu genügen. Sie aufzuzählen scheint mir ebenso müßig wie etwa zu betonen, dass man in Theresienstadt nicht Klavier spielen konnte, solange es keine Instrumente gab. Auch der empfindliche Mangel an Notenpapier dürfte für kommende Geschlechter uninteressant sein. Zu betonen ist nur, dass ich in meiner musikalischen Arbeit durch Theresienstadt gefördert und nicht etwa gehemmt worden bin, dass wir keineswegs bloss klagend an Babylons Flüssen sassen und dass unser Kulturwille unserem Lebenswillen adäquat war; und ich bin überzeugt davon, dass alle, die bestrebt waren, in Leben und Kunst die Form dem widerstrebenden Stoffe abzuringen, mir Recht geben werden.“)

The Third Quartet can in many ways be seen as a culmination of Ullmann’s development as a composer. In it one finds an exemplary balance of rigor and passion, a compelling formal logic, and a wealth of beautiful melodic writing. Although the work unfolds in a single musical span, its form can easily be divided into a traditional four-movement structure where each of the four movements is linked by sophisticated motivic inter-relations.

The first movement, Allegro moderato is primarily lyrical in character and full of wonderfully luxurious harmonic writing, lightened at one point by a [omit- wonderfully] waltz-like melody. The second, Presto, is ferocious and violent in much the same way as the second movement of Shostakovich’s famous Eighth Quartet. If the first movement has introduced the protagonists of our story, then the second has brought us music fit for the vilest of villains. Before the third movement begins, Ullmann brings back a passionate and despairing reminiscence of the first movement- what was nostalgia in the first movement is now transformed into genuine despair. The third movement, Largo, is truly the work’s heart of darkness, beginning with a fugue of desolate and unrelenting intensity. The waltz theme of the first movement here returns full of sadness.

Like the Presto before it, the character of the Rondo Finale is overwhelmingly antagonistic, violent and often terrifying, and is built from a horrific manipulation of the theme of the first movement. However, just when all is despair, Ullmann brings back the music of the first movement in the shape in which we first encountered it, but nostalgia is now replaced by defiance and regret is replaced by passion. A voice of passionate resistance from within the walls of the concentration camp at midnight of humanity’s darkest hour? If ever any person wrote truly courageous music, it was surely Ullmann and this is surely that music.

c. 2004 by Kenneth Woods

 

 

COMPOSER’S NOTE ON THE STRUCTURE OF THE WORK

1. Exposition (the repeat should be observed)

2. Scherzo with Trio and abbreviated repeat

3. Development of the first subject

4.Largo(quasi fugue, with development of the secondary subject as an episode)

5. Rondo-Finale with Coda

V.U.

 

ARRANGER’S NOTE

I was introduced to Viktor Ullmann’s Third String Quartet while a student at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music by my chamber music coach and mentor, Henry Meyer, the long-time second violinist of the La Salle String Quartet. Henry had been incredibly excited to learn of the work’s rediscovery, but by the time he was able to locate the score and parts, the La Salles, whose advocacy for the string quartets of the New Vienna School masters and the quartets of Zemlinsky would have made them ideal advocates for the Ullmann, had retired. “If I can’t play it, I would at least like to teach it,” he told us. We were deeply humbled and honoured by his suggestion. Henry knew all-too-well what Ullmann had faced in the camps. He himself had been interred in bothAuschwitz and Birkenau before escaping at the end of the War. I can remember coaching sessions on dazzling spring afternoons when Henry, always gregarious and witty when we worked together, would take off his jacket, exposing the serial number tattoo etched in his arm by the Nazis some fifty years earlier. The cognitive dissonance of those moments, in which shared joy in the exploration of a newly discovered masterpiece took place in the presence of visible reminders of historic horror, remains with me to this day.

I went on to perform the work often in my regular quartet, and to take it with me to many festivals. It remains a work I love to play. I began considering an arrangement of the piece for string orchestra almost as soon as I learned it. I had conducted Rudolf Barshai’s string orchestra transcriptions of Shostakovich’s Eighth and Tenth String Quartets, and Mahler’s adaptations of Beethoven’s “Serioso” Quartet and Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden,” and so I could easily imagine that the drama, violence and intensity of the Ullmann would work wonderfully with string orchestra. Likewise, Ullmann’s lyricism and coloristic genius come across equally as well in the expanded ensemble as in the original version.

Of course, the most creative aspect of such an arrangement is the creation of a double bass part. Mahler, for instance, was extremely discrete in where and how he used the double basses in his quartet transcriptions, but the art of the bass has come a long way since Mahler’s time. In making this arrangement, I was inspired by the capabilities of many of my bassist colleagues and friends, whose virtuosity concedes nothing to the finest violinists or pianists. This arrangement pre-supposes the bass player(s) will have an instrument capable of going down to a low C.

The arrangement was completed in 1999 and premiered by the Grande Ronde Symphony in February 2000.

As it rains in Worcester

It is 10 in the morning and it is dark and very wet outside, like a scene from a Scandinavian police procedural. It is about a mile’s walk from home to the Elgar School of Music and my shoes, socks and trousers are still very damp from the experience. To cheer myself on a very bleak walk in I thought about a couple of  contrasting, cheering events during the last week.

Made My Day

Yesterday, the library received a request from the “New Years Eve Choir” for 15 Vivaldi scores needed for rehearsal the following day. I rang the number on the request and found myself talking to Hilary Elgar. Now this was a bit of an oh-yeh for me because I remember singing at her house about a dozen years ago on NYE, invited by her sister Margaret RIP, and didn’t realise it was an annual event.

I explained about the situation with the library being abandoned by the county and Hilary said that, sadly, that was the way things were with classical music these days.

I invited her to the library to pick up the scores and showed her around. She was cheered, thrilled almost, by what she found. I told her that we did not plan to go gently, that we wanted to develop and grow the resource, to fight back. As she left said: “You know, this really has made my day!”

I offered to carry the scores to her car for her but she refused. “I do a lot of gardening, you know”.

Made my day, too.

Hoedown

ESO’s concert with Penelope’s Dance Studio at the Arttrix was a blazing highlight of the Christmas season. The orchestra played half the concert on the stage, half in the pit, sometimes accompanied by dance, sometimes not; conducted when necessary by Stephen Roberts (who had composed the music for a new ballet piece for the occasion).

It was an EVENT. The dancers, aged I would guess 5-25, were very disciplined and obviously loving the chance to dance with a band actually playing live.

The highlight of the highlight for me was Copland’s Hoe Down, something which the String Orchestra always play brilliantly. This time it was accompanied by a new ballet, performed by all 50 dancers, that was so perfect for the occasion that just thinking about it brought tears to my eyes that were warmer than the raindrops they displaced.

These are times of doubt for all Arts organisations but let no-one doubt that when ESO puts a show like this on they are bloody good at it!  The feedback we have been receiving ever since could not have been more in line with what we were hoping for – here is a glimpse:

I just wanted to say thank you to all of the musicians for a thoroughly enjoyable evening, Your performance was superb and the light-hearted humour really made it an entertaining and relaxed evening. Thank you also for the respect shown to the children, it was evident throughout the performance that this was mutual. My daughter considers this to be the most enjoyable and important performance she has ever participated in and I feel sure she is not alone in this thought. I have been to see a number of orchestras over the years, all of them excellent. The difference about Saturday was that this was more personal, not only did you make our children feel special, but the audience felt special too.

Quite! Just the kind of endorsements that we would be hoping for in a week leading up to the launching of plans for a possible Worcester Arts Quarter on the site of the old porcelain factory…