Explore the Score- Mendelssohn Violin Concerto

The ESO are next performing the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with Alexander Sitkovetsky on 7 February, 2016 in Hereford Shirehall at 3 PM.

Tickets available here. 

Mendelssohn

Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (1809-1847)

Concerto in E minor for Violin and Orchestra, Opus 64

There were surely many Felix Mendelssohns, but perhaps the most singular of them is the figure described by Michael Steinberg as “the most astonishing of all the composing prodigies.” The major works of his teens—the Octet for Strings, written when he was only sixteen, the miraculous Overture to A Midsummer Night’s Dream written at age seventeen, and the harrowing First Symphony, written when he was but a fifteen-year-old boy ( to say nothing of his first Violin Concerto, written when he was 13)—reveal an incomprehensible perfection of technique allied to a fully-formed musical personality and an astounding fluency of thought. And these works seemed to flow from his pen almost as fast he could write them down.

It is from these early years that dominant image of Mendelssohn as rather-too-facile genius emerges, but one can already see other Mendelssohns present in these early works, in which moments of high tragedy, longing and anxiety sit alongside passages of frothy wit and dreamy lyricism. Mendelssohn was always a ferociously hard worker—projects like the resuscitation of the Bach Saint Matthew Passion involved not only great musical commitment but an incredible administrative effort. As a conductor, Mendelssohn was a tireless and incredibly effective advocate for new music, giving important premieres of many works by his contemporaries, including his friend Robert Schumann.

Mendelssohn’s workaholic lifestyle took a terrible toll on his health- at the time of his death at the age of just 38 he was reported to have the body of an eighty-year-old man. As he grew into adulthood, works came with more struggle and took longer to produce, and Mendelssohn became progressively more self-questioning  during the compositional process. The Violin Concerto was to be his last major orchestral work, and took over six years from conception to completion. Mendelssohn, who had written a Concerto for Violin and Strings at the age of thirteen (the piece was neither performed nor published until the 20th C.), was inspired to return to the genre by his collaboration with the violinist Ferdinand David, concertmaster of the Leipzig Gewandaus Orchestra where Mendelssohn was Music Director. David and Mendelssohn had been friends since childhood and had a close working relationship at the Gewandaus. David even took over conducting duties from Mendelssohn for projects such as the premiere of Schumann’s D minor Symphony in 1842.

Mendelssohn originally suggested the idea of a concerto in E minor to David in 1838, finally completing work on the score in 1844, but right up to the date of the premiere, Mendelssohn seemed wracked with insecurity, repeatedly soliciting advice from David on both compositional and technical details. The work received its first performance under the baton of Niels Gade and was almost immediately hailed as one of the most important, even perfect, works ever written for violin and orchestra- an estimation which has never changed.

For the listener, the Violin Concerto completely belies the insecurities and frustrations the composer seems to have suffered while working on it. It comes across as music conceived and executed with supreme self-confidence, full of originality, emotion and energy.

For much of the 19th C., the prevailing image of Mendelssohn was the one cultivated by his first biographer (and nephew), Sebastian Hensel as “a man always equable, happy and placid in temperament.” Socially, he was famously good company and charming, especially when compared to his more mercurial contemporaries like Schumann, Berlioz or Chopin, but he could also be prone to outbursts of violent temper and periods of deep insecurity. The genial Mendelssohn is very much on show in the Finale of the Violin Concerto, music which must surely rank among the most sublimely untroubled great music ever written. More questioning and serious in intent is the Mendelssohn we encounter in the Andante of the Concerto. There is hopeful lyricism, but also a great deal of longing and even moments of genuine despair. But perhaps the truest of the many Mendelssohn’s is the Romantic firebrand who gave us the first movement of the Violin Concerto.  This Allegro moto appassionato is music of high tragedy, full of anger and anxiety, very much the work of the author of the desolate Hebrides Overture and the largely stony, austere and bleak Scottish Symphony. That music of such tension and pain could lead so flawlessly and apparently inexorably to the sunny exuberance of the Concerto’s finale is greater testament to Mendelssohn’s unique genius than even the astonishing achievements of his teenage years.

— Kenneth Woods c. 2014

Review- ESO at St John’s Smith Square, Mozart Requiem: Origins

 

 

“…If ever an evening set the bar high this was it, but I can’t think of any evening that so comprehensively exceeded expectations.”

From the May edition of Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster Today

 

Mozart’s Requiem: Origins
English Symphony Orchestra
Academia Musica Choir
Kenneth Woods

St John’s Smith Square Friday 24 April 2015

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Requiem in D Minor (K626)

George Frideric Handel, Wilhelm Friedemann Bach

There was no K627

 The trouble with being more a heart-on-sleeve fan rather than cool and restrained ice-critic is that the last concert always does seem to have been the best. Thus it was on a warm spring April night, when I collected the new lawyer and headed for the venue that always delivers, St John Smith Square. I have a number of positive links with the second city, and am Villa fan to boot, so I looked forward to welcoming the English Symphony Orchestra and the Academia Musica Choir to a Westminster gig that used to be beyond our borders, but is now within – for that most sacred of all sacred music the never knowingly under-mythologised Requiem, Mozart speaking to us individually from his death bed, classical structures redacting voyeurism. If ever an evening set the bar high this was it, but I can’t think of any evening that so comprehensively exceeded expectations.

Chatting to Kenneth Woods in the afterglow of the perfect cultural event, edifying, educating, and at once thoroughly entertaining, in the perfectly intimate surroundings of SJSS, Kenneth put his agenda simply: “rebuilding a mass audience for great music will depend on strengthening the sense of community and fellowship around concerts. Pre-concert talks are a great way for the audience and me to get to know each other”.

The charismatic Woods gave a dramatic tour through the key influences of WF Bach and Handel, interacting deftly with the choir and orchestra, before moving seamlessly into Handel’s Funeral Anthem for Queen Caroline (The Ways of Zion do Mourn); high art (and plenty of it) presented with the ease and confidence of the true expert. However interesting and rewarding, these appetisers only served as heralds. Woods clearly knew exactly how to stage Mozart’s Requiem for maximum effect. I suspect if you’ve read this far you know it well but if you don’t, perhaps because sacred music doesn’t appeal, Mozart really does transcend genre. If you think because it’s a requiem it’s going to be too complex or just plain dark (and none of the movements have been made famous in adverts), remember that Mozart’s command of melody makes him perhaps the most accessible of all the really big-hitters.

The main controversy around the Requiem is to do with authorship. Elements of his pupil (and close friend) Süssmayr’s contributions (particularly Sanctus and Benedictus) have been subjected to quite unnecessarily harsh criticism. I actually find them appealingly innocent given that he was writing in the immediate aftermath of Mozart’s death. Some purists might think they’re a bit progressive rock, well maybe, but prog rock was rehabilitated years ago. Haydn’s famous quote “posterity will not see such a talent again in a hundred years “was uttered at the time of The Requiem’s premier. Kenneth Woods in his excellent exposition of the work and its influences establishes that authorship is interesting scholarship but a piece of music stands or falls on its own particularly if brand Mozart is throwing its weight about, and the work was substantially complete by the time of his death.

For the informed amateur the question of authenticity around The Requiem is a distraction that Kenneth Woods has (certainly for me) resolved with considerable finality:

“People have been arguing over [Süssmayr’s contribution when collating and completing Mozart’s work] for years, but I think it’s safe to say that the music is almost all Mozart, who wrote out the vocal parts and bass line from beginning to end for almost all of the piece. Süssmayr must have had sketches and detailed instructions from Mozart for the three movements that Mozart wasn’t able to write down. Süssmayr’s role was primarily that of an orchestrator/arranger. The two short “Osanna” fugues are probably the part of the piece where only Mozart’s theme survives. The idea is inspired, but they’re unimaginatively worked out by poor Süssmayr. At least they’re short.”

So there you are. An argument that has been raging for over 220 years can be parked. It’s pretty much all Mozart, except for the little bits that aren’t, and which are either charming anyway, or immaterial.

On the night, Woods ably supported by a splendid orchestra and choir featuring soprano Sofia Larsson, contralto Emma Curtis, tenor Matthew Minter, and bass Brian Bannatyne-Scott, and with apologies to a cast of about a hundred all of whom deserve a mention, produced a real tour-de-force. Nothing oozes a glamour more lustrous than The Requiem, not even reading Fitzgerald and drinking Vodka Martinis on a balmy Boxing Day in Cap Ferrat. A fabulous rendition of Mozart’s most famous piece, Woods argues perhaps his best. There was no K627.

© James Douglas

 

Mozart Requiem Review- KCW Today May 2015

 

Handel – Messiah

December 20th at Cirencester Parish Church

7:30 PM
English Symphony Orchestra
Saint Michael’s Singers

Philippa Hyde- soprano
Simon Ponsford- countertenor
Greg Tassell- tenor
Ian Caddy- bass

Handel – Messiah

ESO

Handel wrote his masterpiece in a matter of weeks, for the benefit of a foundling hospital in Dublin where it was first performed in April 1742.

As the work gained in popularity, it was generally performed around Easter, but in the 20th and 21st centuries “Messiah” is firmly set in the nation’s traditional Christmas psyche. Particularly poignant in Cirencester’s stunning Parish Church, this is an experience not to be missed.

 

More information at the Saint Michael’s Singers website here.

 

TICKETS ON SALE: Orpheus Box Office www.orpheus-events.com  01905 570979

ESO Programme Notes Online- Hans Gál Concertino for Cello and Strings

Hans Gal (1890-1987)

Concertino for Cello and Strings, opus 87

 

Hans Gál was born in the small village of Brunn am Gebirge, just outside Vienna. He studied with some of the foremost teachers in Vienna, including Richard Robert for piano (teacher of Rudolf Serkin , Clara Haskil and George Szell) and Eusebius Mandyczewski for composition, who had been a close friend of Brahms. In 1915 he won the K. und K. (Royal and Imperial) State Prize for composition for a symphony (which he subsequently discarded). In 1928 His Sinfonietta (which was to become his ‘First Symphony) won the Columbia Schubert Centenary Prize. The next year, with the support of such important musicians as Wilhelm Furtwängler, Richard Strauss and others, he obtained the directorship of the Mainz Conservatory. Gál composed in nearly every genre and his operas, which include Der Artz der Sobeide, Die Heilige Ente and Das Lied der Nacht, were particularly popular during the 1920s. When Hitler rose to power, Gál was forced to leave Germany and eventually emigrated to Britain, teaching at the Edinburgh University for many years.

 

Gál’s music enjoyed a brief resurgence in popularity in the years immediately after World War II, and was featured regularly in broadcasts on BBC radio. However, by the 1960s, BBC director William Glock’s programming philosophy, sharply slanted in favour of strictly modernist music, meant that Gál and other tonal composers of the time found themselves unable to get their music on the airwaves of the “Third Programme.” Gradually, performances also became more and more scarce, and Gál was deeply affected by the death in 1964 of his friend and foremost champion, conductor Otto Schmitgen. There were personal tragedies as well- Gál’s younger son Franz died by his own hand during this period. Circumstances for new work in a tonal idiom were similarly bleak on the continent, and commissions for new works in standard genres or for traditional instruments were almost non-existent. Indeed, the main champions and patrons of Gál’s music at this time were recorder player Carl Dolmetsch and Vinzenz Hladky, Professor of Mandolin at the Vienna academy of Music and publisher of mandolin music, who had instigated Gáls’s writing for mandolin in the period back in Vienna between 1933 and the Anschluss in 1938. Now in the 60s, Hladky published and regularly performed Gál’s music with his mandolin ensembles, to which Gál responded with two Sinfoniettas for Mandolin Orchestra, amongst other works. The Concertino for Cello and Strings, the last of Gál’s five concertinos, was written in 1965, inspired purely by Gál’s inner impulse, rather than a commission. It was premiered in 1968 by the Sudwest Rundfunk Orchestra.

 

What exactly does Gál mean by a “Concertino” rather than a “Concerto”? For some composers, the word “concertino” implies a certain frivolity or lightness of tone, while for others, it implies a work of very modest scale. Neither is true for Gál- the sole unifying factor of his five concertini is that they are all scored for solo instrument and strings, rather than full orchestra. Certainly, there is nothing frivolous about the Cello Concertino, and it is substantial work by any measure- at 27 minutes, it is roughly the same length as his Violin Concerto from 1933. There, however, is plenty of quirky humour in the Finale, which bears the curious tempo marking of “Allegretto ritenuto assai” or “slightly fast, but very held back.” The first movement, which is far more serious in tone, is built from the six note cell which opens the entire piece. Typical of Gál is the persistent ambiguity of major and minor which makes for an atmosphere both questioning and uncertain. At the work’s heart is a touching and lyrical Adagio, absolutely echt-Gál in its bittersweet tenderness. Had he so wished, Gál could certainly have made a killing in the lullaby-writing business.

Kenneth Woods

 

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.