PROGRAM
Performed on November 8, 2014 at Course Hinds Theater
Carlos Miguel Prieto conducting
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov
Russian Easter Overture, op.36
Performed on November 8, 2014 at Course Hinds Theater
Allan Kolsky, clarinet; Carlos Miguel Prieto conducting
Carl Nielsen
Concerto, Clarinet, op.57
Performed on November 8, 2014 at Course Hinds Theater
Carlos Miguel Prieto conducting
Piotr Tchaikovsky
Symphony No.6, op.74, TH 30, B minor (Pathétique)
PROGRAM NOTES
Does extreme weather encourage extreme music? Perhaps not, but all of our music this evening was written by composers living in the far north (where the weather is even worse than it is in Central New York)—and two of our works tonight certainly manifest musical extremity.
The exception is our curtain-raiser, the Russian Easter Overture. Composed in 1888 by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908), it moves from initial darkness into glorious bell-drenched sunshine. The composer himself was not religious—but art doesn’t flow directly from personal emotion and beliefs; and using several melodies from Orthodox church services, Rimsky ...
Does extreme weather encourage extreme music? Perhaps not, but all of our music this evening was written by composers living in the far north (where the weather is even worse than it is in Central New York)—and two of our works tonight certainly manifest musical extremity.
The exception is our curtain-raiser, the Russian Easter Overture. Composed in 1888 by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844-1908), it moves from initial darkness into glorious bell-drenched sunshine. The composer himself was not religious—but art doesn’t flow directly from personal emotion and beliefs; and using several melodies from Orthodox church services, Rimsky was able to convey the joys of an Easter celebration. After that, though, our program shifts gears.
The central work is the Clarinet Concerto, op. 57, composed in 1928 by Danish composer Carl Nielsen (1865-1931). Arguably the greatest clarinet concerto after Mozart’s, it threw down the gauntlet for clarinetists, providing extreme trials that earlier composers hadn’t dreamed of. In fact, “it may be the most technically most challenging clarinet concerto in the standard repertoire,” according to Allan Kolsky—and it’s partly because of the rewards of taking on those challenges that he is so excited to be performing it tonight. In four linked movements running around 25 minutes, the turbulent concerto, says Kolsky, “requires sudden leaps between high notes and low notes and dramatic shifts between loud to soft dynamics. The concerto calls for extreme speed, control, subtlety, and flexibility, and it demands a punishing amount of physical strength and endurance. There’s a certain allure to all that. As a musician, you want to see how you can measure up to the challenge—just as some people run marathons or climb all 46 peaks of the Adirondacks. Playing this piece is a gritty, physical test.”
The concerto, however, is more than a technical showpiece. Nielsen had planned to write a series of five concertos for the wind players of the Copenhagen Wind Quintet, but only completed the two for flute and clarinet before he died. This inspiration is important for understanding the spirit of the piece, since Nielsen hoped not only to provide repertoire for his friends, but also to reflect their characters in the music. His dedicatee for this work, clarinetist Aage Oxenvad, was by all accounts a mercurial person—“a kind and genial man,” says Kolsky, “but with a volatile temper.” The resulting concerto is full of dazzling personality. As Kolsky puts it, “In presenting a musical ‘portrait’ of his clarinetist friend, Nielsen evokes an astonishing series of emotions: in the space of just a few seconds, the concerto can move from friendly folk tunes to shrieking, psychotic fury, or from delicate, poignant intimacy to elegant waltzes or broad slapstick comedy. It’s like a constantly shifting emotional kaleidoscope! That wide musical variety and those rapidly changing characters are features I hope that any listener can appreciate—even on first hearing.”
As you listen, though, you might notice what seems to be a second soloist—the snare-drummer—trying to elbow the clarinet aside. Nielsen’s music, like that of his near contemporary Charles Ives, often involves conversations among players—conversations that can turn contentious. And in contrast to the snare drum in Ravel’s Bolero (which serves to ground the music), the snare drum here (as in Nielsen’s Fifth Symphony) is a disruptive force. In the words of Michael Bull, who will be playing the snare this evening, it’s both a “dual concerto and a duel concerto.” Bull is just as excited about this opportunity as Kolsky is. Since the Nielsen concerto is standard on percussion audition lists, he’s been practicing it all his life; but he’s never had a chance to play it with an orchestra. Furthermore, it gives him a special chance to collaborate. He considers himself an “ensemble musician” and he has a special affinity for chamber music; and this concerto, scored for a small orchestra, is actually very close to chamber music. “It’s an intimate setting,” says Bull, “and it’s a collaboration with your colleagues. Hopefully, I’ll feed off what Allan in doing and he can respond to what I’m doing.”
The Symphony No. 6 by Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893) is just as extreme. It has become such a frequent visitor to our concert halls, however—and it has influenced so many later composers (especially Mahler and Shostakovich)—that familiarity may have dulled our sense of how experimental its rhetoric really is. But its resistance to convention certainly stretched the ears of its listeners when new. No one else in that period dared end a symphony with a lacerating Adagio (much less one that ends quietly)—and if anyone had, they would hardly have preceded it with a third movement march that builds to such furious brilliance that it tricks you into thinking the symphony is over (in fact, even the best-behaved audiences are liable to burst into applause). The second movement is disorienting, too: it has many of the trappings of a waltz, but before you can get comfortable, its five-beat structure throws you off. Then there are the dynamics. It’s easy to figure out what Tchaikovsky means when he marks a climax quadruple forte (ffff)—knock the audience out. But what about that chorale-like moment near the end of the finale where he asks his trombones and tuba to play quintuple piano (ppppp)—a marking so quiet that you’re apt to wonder what kind of ghostly whisper he was expecting his brass to produce. Then there are the frequent dizzying changes in tempo in the outer movements….
It’s tempting to explain these features with romantic stories about Tchaikovsky’s premonitions of his death (similar to the stories surrounding the Mozart Requiem, to be performed on March 28, 2015). Tchaikovsky died less than two weeks after the premiere of the Sixth—a death that, for a while in the 1980s, was shrouded in conspiracy theories about a suicide forced on him by former schoolmates scandalized by his homosexuality. Given the bleakness of the symphony’s finale, such stories seem to fit. But this interpretation dishonors Tchaikovsky in two ways. First, it ignores the way his output, especially in his final years, intertwines high spirits and gloom: Sleeping Beauty (1889) was followed the next year by the grim Queen of Spades, which was in turn soon followed by the sunny Souvenir of Florence; The Nutcracker was composed just before the Sixth. More important, this interpretation suggests that Tchaikovsky was, if not a kind of idiot savant, then a composer whose work is an unmediated reflection of his raw emotions. As we saw with The Russian Easter Overture, however, musical communication is more a matter of art than of autobiography. The emotions of the Tchaikovsky may be extreme, but they are presented with a control that reveals Tchaikovsky at his artistic peak.
Peter J. Rabinowitz
prabinowitz@ExperienceSymphoria.org
FEATURED ARTISTS
Principal Clarinet of Symphoria, Allan Kolsky was born in Providence R.I., and held positions with the Louisiana Philharmonic and the Utah Symphony before joining the Syracuse Symphony as Principal Clarinet in 2002. He has appeared as soloist with both Symphoria and the SSO in clarinet concertos by Mozart, Nielsen, ...
Principal Clarinet of Symphoria, Allan Kolsky was born in Providence R.I., and held positions with the Louisiana Philharmonic and the Utah Symphony before joining the Syracuse Symphony as Principal Clarinet in 2002. He has appeared as soloist with both Symphoria and the SSO in clarinet concertos by Mozart, Nielsen, Finzi and
Weber. He has also performed with the Cincinnati Symphony, the North Carolina Symphony, the Buffalo Philharmonic, the Chautauqua Symphony, the Skaneateles Festival, Glimmerglass Opera and the Colorado Music Festival. In local recitals and chamber music, he has performed for Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music, Joyful
Noise, and Syracuse OASIS. Civic Morning Musicals awarded him the 2011 CMM Award for Excellence in Music Performance in Central New York.
Mr. Kolsky holds music performance degrees from Temple and DePaul Universities, where he studied with Anthony Gigliotti (Principal Clarinet of the Philadelphia Orchestra) and Larry Combs (Principal Clarinet of the Chicago Symphony). His early teachers included Pasquale Cardillo and Frank Marinaccio. As a student, Kolsky won a Tanglewood Fellowship, performed with the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and played in master classes coached by Robert Marcellus, David Shifrin and Harold Wright.
A co-host and featured performer at the 2001 conference of the International Clarinet Association, Kolsky taught clarinet for several years at the University of New Orleans. He currently teaches at both Hamilton College and Onondaga Community College as an adjunct Lecturer in Clarinet.
In addition to music, Allan loves great literature, and his humorous, 500-word parody of William Faulkner’s “The Sound and the Fury” won the international 2001 Faux Faulkner Contest. He has also acted in several community Shakespeare productions with the Syracuse Shakespeare Festival. Allan is married to Ellen Somers, the Assistant Director of Syracuse Jewish Family Service.
Carlos Miguel Prieto’s charismatic conducting and expressive interpretations have led to major engagements and critical acclaim throughout the Americas, Europe, and internationally. Musical America recognized his artistic contributions by honoring him as 2019 Conductor of the Year.
The 2019/2020 season marks Prieto’s fourteenth season as Music Director ...
Carlos Miguel Prieto’s charismatic conducting and expressive interpretations have led to major engagements and critical acclaim throughout the Americas, Europe, and internationally. Musical America recognized his artistic contributions by honoring him as 2019 Conductor of the Year.
The 2019/2020 season marks Prieto’s fourteenth season as Music Director of the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO), where he has been a part of the cultural revitalization of New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina. On February 27, 2018, Prieto led the LPO in its Carnegie Hall debut in a concert celebrating the 80th birthday of composer Philip Glass.
Prieto’s 2019/2020 season includes his debut with the Utah Symphony Orchestra, returns to the NDR Elbphilharmonie, Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Hawaii Symphony Orchestra,Orquesta del Principado de Asturias, and BBC National Orchestra of Wales, as well as his first appearance with The Juilliard Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall since his debut in 2017.
As a guest conductor, Prieto has worked extensively with leading international orchestras including the BBC National Orchestra of Wales,Bilbao Orkestra Sinfonikoa, Detroit Symphony, Frankfurt Radio Symphony, The Hallé, London Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, National Symphony Orchestra (Washington D.C.),National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra,Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg,Orquesta del Principado de Asturias,Orquesta de Valencia,Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, RTE National Orchestra, andRTVE Symphony Orchestra.
A graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Business School, Prieto is a highly influential cultural leader as well as the foremost Mexican conductor of his generation. Prieto has been the Music Director of the Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México (OSN), the country’s most important orchestra, since 2007.In November 2016, he led the OSN on a critically-acclaimed nine-concert tour of Germany and Austria performing the works of Mexican and Latin American composers in halls such as the Wiener Musikverein. In 2008, he was appointed Music Director of the OrquestaSinfónicade Minería, a hand-picked orchestra which performs a two-month long series of summer programs in Mexico City.
Prieto is renowned for championing and commissioning the music of Latin American composers having conducted over 100 world premieres of works by Mexican and American composers.
Prieto’s most recent recording with the Orchestra of the Americas for Linn Records was the critically-acclaimed Pan-American Reflections, with works by Copland and Chavez. Other recent recordings include Elgar and Finzi violin concertos with Ning Feng and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Rachmaninoff’s second and third piano concertos with Boris Giltburg and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, works by Bruch, Beethoven and Mendelssohn with violinist Philippe Quint and the Orquesta Sinfónica de Minería on Avanticlassic, and Korngold’s Violin Concerto on Naxos, which received two Grammy nominations. In 2013, Prieto released a 12-DVD set of live recordings of the complete symphonies of Mahler as part of the Orquesta Sinfónica de Minería’s 35th Anniversary season.
A passionate proponent of music education, Prieto served as Principal Conductor of the Orchestra of the Americas (formerly Youth Orchestra of the Americas) from its inception in 2002 until 2011, when he was appointed Music Director. In 2010 he conducted the ensemble alongside Valery Gergiev on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the World Economic Forum at Carnegie Hall. In Summer 2019, Prieto led the Orchestra of the Americas on tour through his native Mexico and in summer 2020 will tour Russia and Panama with the ensemble. Prieto led Carnegie Hall’s NYO2 in 2018 and 2019, and in 2020 will return with the NYO-USA leading a performance at Carnegie Hall and a North American tour.
In April 2018, Prieto was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music by Loyola University New Orleans.