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Friday, November 29, 2024

Thus Spoke Friedrich Nietzsche: Piano Music

by Georg Predota, Interlude

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche at 21

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche at 21

Essentially, Nietzsche questioned the value and objectivity of truth, looking at God as a historical process and construct. Nietzsche wrote numerous texts on morality, contemporary culture, philosophy and science. Interestingly, he never really trusted the written word. He wrote, “all communication through words is shameless. The word diminishes and makes stupid; the word depersonalises, the word makes what is uncommon common.”

It might come as a surprise, but music was actually Nietzsche’s true love. Descended from a family of pastors where music and theology went hand in hand, young Friedrich was an accomplished pianist and organist by the time he reached the age of seven. At that age, he already played several Beethoven sonatas, transcriptions of Haydn Symphonies, and he was skilled in the way of improvisation. A couple of recent recordings have engaged with Nietzsche’s piano compositions, so we decided to take a closer look.

Reminiscences on my Life

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra

Young Nietzsche initially improvised his own melodies, yet he soon moved on to sketch motets, symphonies, masses and oratorios, most of them unfinished. As he grew up, Nietzsche switched to smaller forms, particularly Lieder and piano pieces. As pianist Jeroen van Veen writes, “these pieces reflect the philosopher as a human being, vulnerable and desirous, but above all melancholic.”

At the age of 14, Nietzsche wrote his “Reminiscences on my Life.” He explained, “All qualities are united in music: it can lift us up, it can be capricious, it can cheer us up and delight us, nay, with its soft, melancholy tunes, it can even break the resistance of the toughest character.”

“Its main purpose, however, is to lead our thoughts upward so that it elevates us and even deeply moves us. All humans who despise it should be considered mindless, animal-like creatures. Let music, this most marvellous gift from God, remain forever my companion on the pathways of life.” 

Barbarous Frenzy

In his “Reminiscences on my Life,” Nietzsche carefully listed his writings and his compositions, and at age fourteen, he had 46 compositions to his name. The earliest Lieder settings of Klaus Groth, the Hungarian poet Sándor Petöfi, Pushkin and Hoffmann von Fallersleben, were all composed “in a kind of barbarous frenzy, as the demon of music took hold of me.”

Nietzsche never took composition lessons, as he was essentially self-taught. He described himself as “a wretched youth who tortured his piano to the point of drawing from it cries of despairs, who with his own hands heave up in front of himself the mire of the most dismal greyish-brown harmonies.” 

The Germania

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche

At the age of 16, Nietzsche started on a Christmas oratorio that was never finished. However, he would develop several themes for later use in subsequent compositions. “I look for words for a melody that I have and for a melody for words that I have, and these two things I have don’t go together, even though they come from the same soul. But such is my fate.”

Nietzsche’s early piano music is frequently dedicated to family and friends. Together with two young friends, he founded a small society called “The Germania,” which was dedicated to the “development of the spirit.” They would send each other compositions and poems, lectures and articles. And Nietzsche loved to improvise. A fellow student listened to these improvisations and wrote, “I should have no difficulty in believing that even Beethoven did not play extempore in a more moving manner.” 

Assessment

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche's Hungarian March

Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche’s Hungarian March

However, assessment from professional sources was less encouraging. Nietzsche sent Hans von Bülow, son-in-law of Richard Wagner, his “Manfred Meditation” for evaluation. Bülow was not impressed and wrote, “this music is the most extreme in fantastic extravagance and the most unsatisfying and most anti-musical composition I have seen in a long time. Is this a joke that deliberately mocks all rules of tonal harmony, of the higher syntax as well as of ordinary orthography?”

“In musical terms, this piece is the equivalent to a crime in the moral world, with which the musical muse, Euterpe, was raped. If you would allow me to give you some good advice, just in case you are actually serious with your aberration into the area of composition, stick with composing vocal music, since the word can lead the way on the wild sea of tones. I apologize, esteemed Herr Professor, of having thrown such an enlightened mind as yours, into such regrettable piano cramps.” 

Lou Salomé

Lou Salomé

Lou Salomé

Nietzsche’s “Hymn to Life” is based on a text by Lou Salomé, a Russian-born psychoanalyst, well-travelled author, narrator, and essayist. At a literary salon in the city, Salomé met the author Paul Rée, who instantly proposed to her. Salomé declined and suggested setting up an academic commune, which was joined by Nietzsche in April 1882. He instantly fell in love with her as well, but she rejected him twice. Instead, Salomé, Rée, and Nietzsche travelled in search of setting up their commune in an abandoned monastery, but as no suitable location was found, the plan came to naught.

We do find an interesting assessment of Nietzsche by Salomé, which reads, “The higher he rose as a philosopher in his exaltation of life, the more deeply he suffered, as a human being, from his own teachings about life. This battle within his soul, the true source of the philosophy of his last years, is only imperfectly represented in his words and books, but it sounds perhaps most profoundly through his music to my poem Hymn to Life.” 

Sabbatical

After completing the “Hymn of Life” and receiving Bülow’s devastating letter, Nietzsche wrote, “As for my music, I only know that it allows me to master a mood that unsatisfied, would perhaps produce even more damage. If music serves only as a diversion or a kind of vain ostentation, it is sinful and harmful. Yet this fault is very frequent; all of modern music is filled with it.”

After receiving this letter, Nietzsche did not touch his piano for a while, but in the end, “his awareness of being an amateur was overshadowed by his urge to become a better person, through music,” writes Vrouwkje Tuinman. As Nietzsche frequently proclaimed, “Emotions, morals, the world: the only way to (maybe) grasp the essence of being is surrendering to the highest of art forms,” he writes again and again. “Without music, life would be a mistake.” 

The Affair Wagner

Richard Wagner

Richard Wagner

During his time as Professor of Philosophy at Basel University, Nietzsche became a close personal friend of Cosima and Richard Wagner, then living in Swiss exile. He was a regular house guest and even had his own room at Tribschen. We know that Nietzsche fell in love with Cosima Wagner, and he certainly composed some music for her.

Nietzsche dedicated his first book, “The Birth of Tragedy” to Wagner, proclaiming Wagner’s music the modern rebirth. The first part of the book was developed from long conversations between Cosima, Wagner and Nietzsche, roughly around the same time that Wagner began to develop the story of what eventually would become the “Ring Cycle.” 

Postlude

Cosima Wagner

Cosima Wagner

Nietzsche offered Richard and Cosima his “Reminiscence of a New Year’s Eve,” but they basically ignored it. In turn, Nietzsche started to object to Wagner’s “endless melody,” suggesting that listening to Wagner’s music made his whole body feel discomfort. He called it “a music without a future,” and that the effects of Wagner’s music are “for idiots and the masses.”

Nietzsche suffered a mental breakdown at the age of 44, from which he never recovered. For the last eleven years of his life, he was no longer able to speak or write, but he continued to play the piano. Listening, performing and composing music became an unconscious philosophical activity for Nietzsche, who had suggested earlier that “sound allowed me to say certain things that words were incapable of expressing.”

Editors of Nietzsche considered his compositions “amateurish and lacking in originality.” However, composing for Nietzsche meant experimentation and therapy, as he famously wrote, “we have art so not to die from the truth.” His piano music continues to be explored, and scholars write that “these piano miniatures present a fascinating window into the creative mind of a still-lofty figure in Western thought.” To me, his piano music, an elaboration of the conflicted world of Schumann, sounds hesitant and even unguarded, and the occasional ray of optimism is quickly cast aside by all-pervasive melancholy.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Why do orchestras have ‘leaders’ and what do they do?

Ilona Schmiel, leader of the Tonhalle Orchestra, Zurich.

Ilona Schmiel, leader of the Tonhalle Orchestra, Zurich. Picture: Alamy

By Will Padfield

One of the most elusive figures of the orchestra is the leader – or concertmaster. But what’s their role, and when did it start? 

An orchestra can be a baffling organism to comprehend. The way it is arranged, structured and managed has evolved over centuries to arrive at its present-day set-up.

To anyone who isn’t in the know, one of the most cryptic figures of the orchestra is the leader – or concertmaster. Outranked only by the conductor, this musician is responsible for good relations between the orchestra and maestro, acting as an intermediary and ensuring all goes smoothly.

They sit at the front of the orchestra, direct everyone in tuning their instruments, and have their very own applause on entry to the concert stage.

But what are the origins, development and function of this mysterious being? We delved into the history... 


When was the concertmaster position invented?

The role of the concertmaster has evolved throughout the ages, changing as orchestral music expanded and became increasingly complex. In the Baroque era (roughly 1600-1750), composers such as Bach and Vivaldi firmly cemented the prominence of the violin family as the de facto leading voice of an ensemble, writing music with prominent lead violin parts, often with demanding solos.

In the days before the conductor was a regular fixture of an orchestra, the concertmaster, or ‘lead violinist’ would usually direct the ensemble and play simultaneously, using the movements of the bow to keep time. At this time, there was no standardised position of ‘leader’, and the mechanics of ensemble leadership varied greatly between countries.

During the mid- to late-18th century – known as the Classical era – orchestras expanded even further, with wind and brass sections gradually becoming permanent fixtures in orchestras. With a larger group of musicians, there became an even greater need for a clear leader to create (literal) harmony between all the musicians in the ensemble. 

The principal violinist emerged as the logical figure to take on this demanding role, responsible for leading the string section, creating a cohesive sound and, crucially, keeping everyone playing in time!


Beethoven Symphony No. 5 - Academy of St Martin in the Fields & Joshua Bell

Just as the leader started to take full control over orchestral proceedings, the title was contested by the emergence of the conductor in the latter half of the classical period. Again, the nuances of history mean this change didn’t happen overnight, but by the mid-19th century, the Romantic era was in full swing, and the leader’s role had morphed more into the one we recognise today.

During this period, music became increasingly expressive, and orchestras expanded even more. The concertmaster became essential in determining the sound of an orchestra and making their own interpretive decisions in rehearsals. Composers often wrote virtuosic solos for the leader, where the violinist needed to seamlessly adapt from sitting as part of the section to stepping up to the main solo voice for a passage.

Anton Sorokow - Richard Strauss "Ein Heldenleben" Violin Solo

What does a concertmaster do today?

Today, the position of concertmaster is highly revered, with the major orchestras offering highly lucrative sums of money to employ the very best violinists. The crucial role of the leader is to set the very highest standards of musicianship for the other musicians to follow.

A good leader elevates the level of an orchestra, and a bad one can have disastrous consequences for everyone involved. Aside from being a superlative instrumentalist, a substantial part of the leader’s role is managing the occasionally fragile relationship between the conductor and the ensemble.

Conductors are often jet-setting between orchestras – with the most successful of them conducting orchestras across several continents in the same month – but the concertmaster is a fixed member of their orchestra.

A good leader will have the best read on the interpersonal relationships between the musicians and can empathise with the members of the orchestra, who may be tired after a particularly trying schedule or a tour, and communicate this to the conductor. It is also the leader’s responsibility to ensure rehearsals are conducted in a mutually beneficial way, stepping in to stop rehearsal chatter (believe it or not, this happens…) where it would be unwise for the conductor to issue a warning.

Brahms: Symphony No. 1 / Blomstedt · Berliner Philharmoniker

Fundamentally, the concertmaster is a vital link between the conductor and the orchestra. They help translate a conductor’s gestures into actual playing technique, which is then copied by the entire string section, hugely influencing the collective sound of the ensemble.

Perks of the job

One of the most recognisable roles of the leader is to indicate when it is time for the orchestra to tune by standing and gesturing to the oboist, who gives the tuning note (an A).

In the UK and USA, the leader will walk on separately to the rest of the musicians and take a much-served show of appreciation from the audience. As a mark of respect, the leader is the first to leave the stage, with the orchestra filing in behind off stage.

So, there you have it! The next time you are at a concert, spare a thought for the leader and all the hard, and oft-underappreciated work they do to keep the orchestra functioning.


Vote for your favourite Christmas carol in The Nation’s Favourite Carol with Viking 2024

 

26 November 2024, 07:12 | Updated: 26 November 2024, 09:00

Vote for your all-time favourite Christmas carol in The Nation’s Favourite Carol 2024.
Vote for your all-time favourite Christmas carol in The Nation’s Favourite Carol 2024. Picture: Classic FM
Classic FM

By Classic FM

It’s time to vote for your all-time favourite Christmas carol, in The Nation’s Favourite Carol with Viking on Classic FM! 

Christmas is almost upon us, and we want to find out your all-time favourite carol.

Which Christmas carol really gets you in the festive mood? Which melody gets you revved up to cook that Christmas turkey?

Does the glorious sound of ‘O Come All Ye Faithful’ or ‘Hark the Herald’ send shivers down your spine? Or do you prefer the peaceful lull of ‘Silent Night’ or ‘Away in a Manger’ to soundtrack the holiday season?

Cast your vote below for the carol you love the most! Voting ends at 23:59 on Sunday 15 December. 


Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Patricia JANEČKOVÁ: "Frühlingsstimmen" (Johann Strauss II)


Johann Strauss II: "Frühlingsstimmen" / "Voices of Spring" for soprano and orchestra https://bit.ly/2WHoEuj Soprano: Patricia JANEČKOVÁ - "New Years Concert in Vienna Style“ Janáček Philharmonic Ostrava, Chief conductor: Heiko Mathias Förster

Broken Vessels (Amazing Grace)| Larah Claire Sabroso


Monday, November 25, 2024

Regine Velasquez - You've Made Me Stronger



FSO - West Side Story - Suite (Leonard Bernstein)



Friday, November 22, 2024

Celtic Woman 'O Come All Ye Faithful'


Frank Martin (1890-1974): A Spiritual Tribute

By Georg Predota, Interlude 

The young Frank Martin

The young Frank Martin

Martin frequently wrote and lectured about his own work and about music in general. His beliefs are beautifully captured in a statement from 1966. “Whatever the movements of the soul, the spirit, the sensibility that are manifested in one’s work, and whether the state is one of anguish or even despair, one’s art inevitably bears the sign of … this liberation, this sublimation which evokes in us a finished form, and which is, I think, what is called beauty.”

Frank Martin was the tenth and youngest son of a Huguenot pastor, and he would later say of himself. “As a son of a minister, and as the son of a minister who has not renounced his faith, religion has affected me twice as strongly.” Spirituality was a continual source of inspiration, and on the 50th anniversary of his death, let us commemorate his lifelong devotion to sacred music. 

The “Mass for double Choir” dates from 1922, however, it was premiered only in 1963. Martin never intended this work to be performed publicly, as he “was afraid that it would be judged on a purely aesthetic level… it was a matter between God and myself.” Personal modesty aside, Michel Khalifa writes, “for a long time, Martin had been unable to fathom his own religious feelings. He had first to come to terms in his own way with the faith he had been brought up with.”

Frank Martin's Mass for double choir - Credo

Frank Martin’s Mass for double choir – Credo

The same might be said for Martin’s musical language. Since the Mass was not destined for public ears, Martin was free to experiment stylistically. Initially, it almost sounds like a homage to the vocal polyphony of the Renaissance, with free-flowing and metrically liberated vocal lines, a meticulous setting of the text, and a prevailing polyphonic texture. While we hear the influences of Gregorian chant and J.S. Bach, the harmonic language unmistakably originated in the 20th century.

Decades later, Martin found some shortcomings in his work. “Even though I wrote the mass for a large number of voices, it is music of an inward nature. My musical language has developed considerably since that period. There are some things in this work that I would no longer be able to write; there are also weaknesses that I would never repeat… Let us hope that conviction, youth and some beauty can still be appreciated in this mass that is almost half a century old.”

Golgotha

Frank Martin's Golgotha - Andante music score

Frank Martin’s Golgotha – Andante


Martin continued to compose smaller religious works, but he made his breakthrough with several well-received instrumental works and concertos. Only in the spring of 1945 did he once again turn to spiritual matters. As the composer relates, “I admired a marvellous collection of etchings by Rembrandt at an exhibition in our Museum of Fine Arts. Amongst so many masterpieces, I was particularly impressed by three prints, three states, each very different, of a vision of Calvary, usually entitled The Three Crosses.”

“Against a dark background of humans, who seem to be frozen in shock, the three crosses rise up; a sheet of white light descends from heaven onto the central cross, bearing Jesus in agony.” Martin later commented, “on this small surface of paper, we see the moment in world history where the fundamental incompatibility that exists between our material world and the world of the spirit was most dazzlingly manifested.”

For his oratorio Golgotha, Martin fashioned a text from the Passion narratives of all four gospels, concentrating all the light on the person of Christ while leaving the other protagonists in the shadows. In the manner of J.S. Bach, Martin intersperses the narrative with poetic reflections taken from St. Augustin’s Confessions and Mediations. In his music, Martin focused on finding the “right expression for each scene and each sentiment.”

Much of the music has the luminous transparency of a stained-glass window. As he relates, “I was not afraid to write certain passages in a very simple musical language, and others in a much more complex and tormented language… Let me assure you that no difficulties were included in this score unless I found it essential for the musical expression of the text.” The work, an act of faith and devotion, premiered in Geneva in April 1948.

Maria-Triptychon

Frank Martin

Frank Martin


The Maria-Triptychon originated as a “Magnificat” for soprano, solo violin and orchestra at the request of the violinist Wolfgang Schneiderhan and his wife, the soprano Irmgard Seefried. Martin writes, “At first, it was performed in Lucerne, but it soon became clear to me that the “Magnificat” required a surrounding musical frame. I therefore added an “Ave Maria” and a “Stabat Mater” to form what might be called the two flanking panels to the central panel and gave it the title Maria-Triptychon.”

Eventually, Martin added a piano to the medium-sized orchestra, and the obbligato solo violin plays in an almost concertante fashion. We immediately enter a mystical world in the first measures of the “Ave Maria.” An annotator writes, “From the sound of the slowly soaring violin, doubled by harp harmonics and una corda piano, it is clear that Martin has found in these Marian texts a release from the angst which pervaded a good deal of his earlier music.”

Neo-classical rhythms and a sharper level of dissonance are immediately audible in the “Magnificat.” Martin creates a complex texture with both the violin and voice circling in and out. Changes in mood related to the text are also expressed in the music, and repetitions of words become a specific device to unify musical form. A harsh dissonant ostinato over a static pedal point serves as the foundation for the soprano to intone the short lines of the “Stabat Mater.” The music is unrelentingly intense and only achieves some kind of tranquillity on the final “Amen.”

Requiem

Frank Martin's Requiem

Frank Martin’s Requiem


Sacred works dominate the last years of Martin’s life. Most important among these late works is the Requiem, dating from 1971/72. He had wanted to write a Requiem for decades, but the final stimulus came only in January 1971. As Martin relates, “I went on a Mediterranean trip where I was able to contemplate all alone in Saint Marc’s Church in Venice, the Cathedral of Monreale in Palermo and the Greek temples of Paestum near Naples. These three monuments, which express the sentiments of the adoration so completely, awakened in me a desire to build in my turn, using my limited means, a temple devoted to the adoration.”

Martin scored the work for four soloists, choir, orchestra including cembalo, and organ. He reduced the contrapuntal aspects of the music in order to give priority to the liturgical text. A gentle pianissimo from the strings and organ initiates the “Introit,” and after the music intensifies, it returns to the quiet of the beginning. The “Kyrie” opens contrapuntally but concludes with a quiet “Lento” passage.

The expansive “Dies Irae” opens vigorously and is followed by a chamber-like “Andante.” The intimate duet of oboe and tenor allows the orchestra and choir to rejoin, and after an energetic outburst, the movement simply dissolves. Reduced forces are employed in the “Offertorium,” while the “Sanctus” terminates with a powerful brass fanfare. The organ and alto contemplate the words of the “Agnus Dei,” with the inserted “In Paradisum” establishing an ethereal mood. Musically, the “Lux Aeterna” returns us to the “Introitus”, with the music exuding “an air of optimism.”

Polyptyque

Polyptyque

Polyptyque

Martin’s religious and spiritual inspiration also informs his instrumental works. When he was asked by Yehudi Menuhin and Edmond de Stoutz to write a concerto for violin and string orchestra, Martin produced a set of six pictures of the Passion of Christ. He found his inspiration in Siena, when he saw “a polyptych by Duccio, a set of very small panels representing the various episodes of the Passion.”

Martin was looking to “transpose into music the emotions that these scenes aroused in me, and in Image des Rameaux, I visualised a noisy crowd pressing forward to see the Lord entering Jerusalem… In the Image de la Chambre, we see Christ addressing disciples, and the Image de Judas portrays a being full of anguish, tormented at heart…The Image de Gethsémané is the anguish of loneliness, an intense prayer, and the Image du Jugement shows the full horror of the crowd freed from all restraint… I felt that there was no other possible ending save an Image de la Glorification.”

Michael De Sapio suggests, “Amid the deluge of music written in the 20th century, Martin’s work stands out for its integrity, humanism, and striving for beauty within a framework of changing conceptions of harmony, melody, and rhythm.” Fifty years after his death, as Alain Corbellari has recently written in a dedicated article for Interlude, “Frank Martin is very much alive,” and his expansive oeuvre awaits further exploration and renewed interpretations.