Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra plays in Bucharest together with chief conductor Santtu-Matias Rouvali and pianist Leif Ove Andsnes.
Programme
Lili Boulanger D'un matin de printemps 5 min
Lili Boulanger grew up in a particularly musical environment. Her father Ernest (1815-1900) was a singing teacher and composer, mainly of light operas. Already at the age of 20, he had won the attractive Prix de Rome with the cantata Achilles. At the Paris Conservatoire, he had the Russian princess Raisa Myshetskaya, 43 years his junior, as a vocal student, and they married in 1877. In 1887, they had a daughter, Nadia, who was awarded second prize in the Prix de Rome in 1908 - she lived to be 92 years old and taught a long line of 20th-century foremost composers from around the world in composition. In 1893, the 77-year-old Ernest became the father of another daughter, Lili, who first studied with her sister and then with Gabriel Fauré, and who in 1913 was awarded that year's Prix de Rome! She became the first woman the French Academy deemed worthy of the grand prize. Unfortunately, she was sickly and weak, and was only 24 years old when she was swept away by Crohn's disease.
Lili Boulanger managed to compose around 40 works during her too short life. Already at the age of 14, she had decided to become a composer. During her last year of life, Lili Boulanger composed "A spring morning", the last thing she wrote herself. She dictated the Pie Jesu prayer to her sister three weeks before she passed out powerless. D'un matin de printemps can be played for violin and piano or flute and piano, and is also available in an orchestral version. Given the circumstances, it's strange to listen to this carefree and positive piece, but she had just undergone an operation that appeared to be successful…
As a curiosity, it can be mentioned that the asteroid 1181 has been named after Lili Boulanger, and a crater on Venus after Nadia Boulanger.
STIG JACOBSSON
Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 5 "Emperor" 38 min
Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-flat major, Op. 73
Allegro
Adagio un poco mosso
Rondo: Allegro ma non troppo
Beethoven end-dated his fifth and final piano concerto in 1809. The music was written during a time of political unrest. The French had occasionally attacked Vienna and in April-May 1809 thundering cannonades were directed mainly at the city walls of Vienna. Beethoven lived close to the wall and therefore sought refuge in his brother's basement - not out of fear, but to protect the remnants of his hearing with his head buried in a pillow. Well aware of his poor hearing, after the 1808 premiere of the Fourth Concerto and Choral Fantasy, Beethoven had greatly reduced his public appearances as a pianist, and he did not intend to play his Fifth Piano Concerto himself. At the first performance on 28 November 1811 in Leipzig, the soloist was Friedrich Schneider and the conductor Johann Philipp Christian Schulz. The reception was extremely warm and it was written in the press that "the entire auditorium was raptured".
The soloist may begin the concert by decorating three expressive orchestral chords before the main theme itself is presented. The rest of the movement contains much that takes on an improvisational character, but is precisely notated. It is quite clear that Beethoven did not intend to play the concerto himself because he does not even leave room for improvised cadenzas. At the end of the first movement, he clearly states that the soloist should play the cadence indicated in the score. The first movement is by a good margin the longest.
As in the Third Piano Concerto, the main theme of the slow movement is a disguised version of the minor theme of the first movement. This marching theme has now been transformed into a beautiful anthem. The violins are played coordinated and the basses play pizzicato. The second movement, via a couple of notes in the horns, goes directly into the finale, where the boldly swirling theme is presented by the piano before being taken up by the orchestra. The movement develops into a fresh musical rondo. The drumsticks will play a significant role and can all alone play the two notes that make up the main bass line. In the closing coda, the timpani even gets a solo passage together with the piano. It's subtleties like this that make Beethoven's music constantly fresh!
Stig Jacobsson
Intermission25 min
Stravinsky Petrushka (1947) 34 min
The Shrovetide Fair
Petrushka's Room
The Moor's Room
Towards evening: The Moor and Death of Petrushka
Petrushka, which is an example of Stravinsky's feeling for Russian folklore, actually comes from Stravinsky's first years as a composer. The young law student, who took private lessons in orchestration, had caught the eye of ballet impresario Diaghilev after some orchestral pieces performed back home in Russia. Djagilev was looking for something musically new and interesting. Paris critics liked the Russian ballet's inventive decor and choreography, but found the music boring. After Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, no critics wrote that anymore.
But this was several years ahead, first Diaghilev lured Stravinsky to France. The ballet The Firebird was Stravinsky's definitive breakthrough and perhaps the work that made him truly believe in his chosen profession. Ballet number two, Petrushka, became as popular as the Firebird. Petrushka is about three dolls that appear in Russian markets and the music is as full of color and whimsy as you can imagine such a market could be. The amazing dancer Nijinsky played the lead role at the Théâtre du Châtelet on June 13, 1911.
Over 30 years later, in 1947, Stravinsky made a new version in the United States with some adaptations, most likely because he did not have the copyright to his earlier version and had to rewrite it to generate income when the work was performed. I'm probably not alone in thinking that the music for Petrushka is among the most beautiful things Stravinsky wrote. Time and time again, the music evokes smiles. Here there are carousels, love, positivity, romance, slapstick. When you close your eyes, both smells and images come to mind.
KATARINA A KARLSSON
Saturday 9 September 2023: The event ends at approx. 21.30
Participants
Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra
The Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1905 and currently consists of 109 musicians. The orchestra is based in Gothenburg Concert Hall – a gem of functionalism on Götaplatsen square that has enchanted music lovers since 1935. Wilhelm Stenhammar was the orchestra’s Chief Conductor from 1907 until 1922. He gave the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra a strong Nordic profile and invited his colleagues Carl Nielsen and Jean Sibelius to collaborate with the orchestra. Under the leadership of Chief Conductor Neeme Järvi between 1982 and 2004, the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra undertook a number of international tours and made a hundred or so album recordings while establishing itself as one of Europe’s foremost orchestras. In 1997 the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra received the title of the National Orchestra of Sweden.
Since season 2017-2018 Santtu-Matias Rouvali is Chief Conductor of the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. Since season 2019-2020 Barbara Hannigan is Principal Guest Conductor. Christoph Eschenbach was also Principal Guest Conductor of Gothenburg Symphony in the years 2019-2022 – together they formed a strong three-leaf clover consisting of three completely different types of artists. We are also extremely proud to be an official partner of soprano Barbara Hannigan’s mentor initiative Equilibrium, with focus on young singers and musicians who are just beginning their careers.
Sten Cranner is the orchestra’s CEO and Artistic Director, while Gustavo Dudamel holds the title of Honorary Conductor and Neeme Järvi that of Principal Conductor Emeritus. Region Västra Götaland is owner of the orchestra. The Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra works regularly with conductors such as Herbert Blomstedt, Joana Carneiro, Jukka-Pekka Saraste, Christian Zacharias and Anja Bihlmaier.
Santtu-Matias Rouvali conductor
Since 2017, Santtu-Matias Rouvali is the chief conductor of the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. He also has a successful international career as a conductor and has been hailed by The Guardian as "the Finnish conductor tradition's senesta stortade påvning man bara muste lysna på". Since 2021, Santtu-Matias Rouvali is also the chief conductor of the Philharmonia Orchestra in London. He has toured with the Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra and pianist Hélène Grimaud in Nordic capitals as well as with pianist Alice Sara Ott and percussionist Martin Grubinger in Germany. The years 2013-2022 Santtu-Matias Rouvali was chief conductor and artistic director of the Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra in Finland.
During the 2023-2024 season, Santtu-Matias Rouvali will continue to collaborate with orchestras at the top level throughout Europe and the USA, such as the BBC Proms, the New York Philharmonic and many more. He collaborates with soloists such as Leif Ove Andsnes, Arabella Steinbacher, Nemanja Radulovic, Leonidas Kavakos, Bruce Liu, Alice Sara Ott, Sheku Kanneh-Mason, Vadim Gluzman, Randall Goosby and Vilde Frang.
When he is not conducting, he devotes himself to farming and fishing at his farm outside Tampere.
Leif Ove Andsnes piano
The New York Times has called Leif Ove Andsnes "a pianist of magnificent elegance, strength and insight". With his phenomenal technique and profound interpretations, Leif Ove Andsnes has won appreciation throughout the world. In 2019-2020 he was Artist in Residence at the Gothenburg Symphony. Leif Ove Andsnes gave his first concert with the Gothenburg Symphony as early as 1989, and has done around ten concerts with the orchestra since then, including a tour to Las Palmas and Tenerife.
Leif Ove Andsnes gives solo evenings every season and appears as a soloist in the world's leading concert halls with the leading orchestras. In 2017-2018 he was Artist in Residence at the New York Philharmonic. He is also a diligent chamber musician and founder of Rosendal's chamber music festival. For nearly two decades he shared the artistic leadership of the chamber music festival in Risør and in 2012 was the artistic director of the Ojai Festival in California. He was awarded an honorary doctorate at Juilliard in New York in 2016 and at the University of Bergen in 2017. Leif Ove Andsnes has made over 30 disc recordings, including solo piano by Chopin, "Ballades & Nocturnes" (Sony Classics). The edition of Beethoven's five piano concertos has been praised by the critics.
He is above all known as a master of Grieg and his recording of Grieg's piano concerto with the Berliner Philharmoniker (2003) is considered one of the best of all time.
Significant performances during the 2022-2023 season included at the BBC Proms as well as at Carnegie Hall in New York, where Andsnes played Dvorak's relatively unknown Poetic Tone Pictures, music that he also provided
on disc. Leif Ove Andsnes last visited the Gothenburg Symphony in February 2023 when he played Debussy's Fantasy for piano and orchestra, which was also recorded for GSOplay.