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2014-15 OPERATING GRANTS 30 TH SEASON Mozart Piano Sonatas Kristian Bezuidenhout, fortepiano S Saturday 7 March 2015 at 8pm Oak Bay United Church Victoria Conservatory of Music

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Page 1: TH SEASON Mozart Piano Sonatas - Early Music Society of ...earlymusicsocietyoftheislands.ca/pdf/Concert6_program2014-15.pdf · TH SEASON Mozart Piano Sonatas ... Sarabande Minuet

2014-15 OPERATING GRANTS

30 T H SEASON

Mozart Piano Sonatas Kristian Bezuidenhout, fortepiano

SSaturday 7 March 2015 at 8pm

Oak Bay United ChurchVictoria Conservatory of Music

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EMSI SEASON SPONSORS

Henry Lawes: Songs of an English Cavalier

Jeffrey Thompson tenor, La Rêveuse FRANCE

8pm Saturday 28 maRch 2015 ◆ alix Goolden hall

Henry Lawes lived through the troubled times of 17th-century England. He was acknowledged in his day as one of the finest composers for the voice. With his extended vocal ranges, expressive melodies, vibrant dissonances and the high poetic quality of his texts, Lawes is a subtle painter of the melancholy of his age.

“virtuosity, inner energy and dramatic flair.” Washington Post

Hildegard of Bingen: Songs & VisionsVocame GERMANy

8pm Saturday 25 apRiL 2015 ◆ alix Goolden hall

Mystic, poet, saint, visionary, Doctor of the Church: Hildegard was many things, but perhaps above all she was a composer of inspired music. This internationally acclaimed ensemble transports audiences back to the 12th century and makes it possible to share Hildegard’s ecstasy.

“A rewarding, musical (very) Early Music adventure— a harmoniously unique, deeply spiritual aural experience.”

CresCendo

2014–15 Concert Season

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Mozart Piano Sonatas

Kristian Bezuidenhout fortepiano

S Sonata in E flat major K. 282

AdagioMenuetto I-II

Allegro

Suite in C major K. 399 OvertureAllegro

Allemande CouranteSarabande

Minuet in D major K. 355

Gigue in G major K. 574

Rondo in A minor K. 511

INTERMISSION

Fantasie in C minor K. 475

Sonata in A major K. 331 Andante grazioso

MenuettoAlla Turca—Allegretto

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Programme Notes

SRecitals these days are frequently held in vast concert halls with a seating capacity of more than 1,500 persons. Pianists usually perform on grand pianos with 88 keys and more than seven octaves. This evening, we sit in a theatre that holds just 275 persons. We step into Mozart’s world, and leave the 21st century orbit of incessant sound assaults, and retune our ears, our awareness and sensibility. From the first measures of the opening work on this evening’s all-Mozart programme, performed on an instrument that many listeners hear for the first time, we immediately become participants in the unique sound world of the 18th century.

The fortepiano is a keyboard instrument made almost exclusively of wood. The sound of the fortepiano is produced when the hammers strike the strings, in contrast to the harpsichord in which the strings are plucked. The keys of a fortepiano are shorter and narrower than those of a modern piano. The strings run in the same direction as the grain of the soundboard, from the keyboard directly to the rear of the instrument. This “straight stringing” gives the fortepiano a matchless clarity and transparency of sound. The earliest fortepianos had a range of four octaves. By the mid 18th century the keyboard had been extended to five.

The fortepiano of Mozart’s time had evolved significantly from the first keyboard instrument of its kind, attributed to the Italian instrument maker Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655–1732). Cristofori was the custodian of musical instruments at the Florence court of Ferdinando de’ Medici, a devoted patron of music. Cristofori’s invention lay in his design of the instrument’s action: the escapement—a mechanism that allowed the hammer to strike the string and instantly rebound, leaving the string free to resonate. An inventory of instruments in the Medici collection, dated 1700, mentions an “arpicimbalo,” i.e., an instrument resembling a harpsichord, “newly invented by Bartolomeo Cristofori with hammers and dampers… and a range of four octaves.” A 1711 article in the Venetian Giornale de’ letterati d’Italia describes Cristofori’s instrument as a “gravicembalo col piano e forte” (“harpsichord with soft and loud”),

the first time it was called by its eventual name, pianoforte. The oldest surviving Cristofori instrument (1720) is located in New york’s Metropolitan Museum.

During the 18th century, significant technical improvements were made to Cristofori’s escapement, as well as to the damper—the mechanism that controls the stopping of the string’s vibration. A damper had been devised by Gottfried Silbermann (1683–1753), but it required the use of the player’s hands in order to function, and thus could only be deployed during pauses in the music. The fortepiano developed by the outstanding Augsburg instrument builder Johann Andreas Stein (1728–1792) incorporated a damper that was controlled by a knee lever, pushing upward on the lower surface of the instrument—similar to the effect of a sustaining pedal on a concert grand piano.

In 1777, 19-year-old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, accompanied by his mother Anna Maria, visited Stein’s Augsburg workshop during a concert tour that also took them to Munich, Mannheim, and Paris (father Leopold remained at home in Salzburg). The instrument that Wolfgang discovered in Stein’s atelier inspired him with its expressive possibilities. In a letter to his father dated October 17, 1777, he refers enthusiastically to Stein’s improvements: “No matter how I decide to touch the keys, the tone is always even. It never jars, it is never stronger or weaker or entirely absent; in a word, it is always even. His instruments have this special advantage over others that they are made with escape action. Only one maker in a hundred bothers about this. But without an escapement it is impossible to avoid jangling and vibration after the note is struck. When you touch the keys, the hammers rebound at the instant they strike the strings, whether you hold down the keys or release them… The device…which you work with your knee is better on his than on other instruments. I have only to touch it and it works; and when you shift your knee the slightest bit, you do not hear the least reverberation.”

After moving to Vienna some five years later, Mozart purchased a fortepiano from Anton Walter—

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Vienna’s most important instrument builder—whose instruments had a more powerful sound than those built by Stein. Walter’s instruments were the deluxe keyboard instruments of the period. The force needed to depress a key on a Viennese fortepiano was only about a fourth of what is needed on a modern piano, and the descent of the key only about half as much. Mozart used a Walter piano during the performances of his mature piano concertos. Beethoven played a Walter piano, as did Schubert.

This evening’s programme offers a dazzling, kaleidoscopic view of Mozart’s compositions for solo keyboard.

The Sonata in E flat major K. 282 was written in 1774 by the 18-year-old Mozart while in Munich for the production of his opera La Finta Giardiniera. The poignant mood of the first movement is lightened by the charm and wit of the Minuet and Rondo that follow.

The Suite in C major K. 399, paying homage to the Baroque, was composed soon after Mozart moved to Vienna in 1782, and sometimes bears the subtitle “In the style of Handel.” Mozart completed the first three movements: Overture–Allemande–Courante. The Sarabande, left unfinished, was completed by the American pianist Robert Levin.

The enigmatic and contemplative nature of the Menuet in D major K. 355 is surprising—quite removed from the usual association of the Menuet as a slow, stately 18th-century dance. The astounding “Eine Kleine Gigue” K. 574, just thirty-eight measures in length, is remarkable for the spare, angular quality of composition. Pianist Alfred

Brendel, in his A Pianist’s A–Z, underscores the “chromatic boldness” of both the Menuet K. 355 and the Gigue K. 574. Tchaikovsky quoted these works in the first two movements of Mozartiana, his homage to Mozart, written in 1887 to mark the centenary of the premiere of Don Giovanni.

The Rondo in A minor K. 511 was composed in Vienna in the spring of 1787, between the composition of The Marriage of Figaro and Don Giovanni. In his biography of Mozart, British musicologist Arthur Hutchins wrote: “It is hard not to regard the resignation of this Rondo as personal—resignation to a despair beyond tears…Measured by the clock, its length is unusual, yet the player finds himself lingering over it and wishing it were even longer.”

The astonishing Fantasy in C minor K. 475 unfolds with extreme contrasts, mercurial shifts of mood, and continuous changes of tempo and expression. It was dedicated to Madame Therese von Trattner, a pupil of Mozart and the wife of his wealthy and influential Viennese landlord. Musicologist Alfred Einstein writes: “The Fantasy gives us the truest picture of Mozart’s mighty power of improvisation—his ability to indulge in the greatest freedom and boldness of imagination, the most extreme contrast of ideas, the most uninhibited variety of lyric and virtuosic elements.”

The Sonata in A major K. 331 is the second of three sonatas composed in 1783, and may have been composed with Mozart’s sister Maria Anna (Nannerl) in mind. The well-known last movement, the Rondo alla Turca, took its inspiration from the popularity in Vienna at that time of “pseudo-Turkish” music.

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Mozart’s Violin Concerto K. 291 and his opera The Abduction from the Seraglio displayed the fashion for the alla Turca style.

Mozart was one of the greatest keyboard virtuosi of his time. In today’s whirlwind days of the internet, what would we not give to possess a vintage studio recording of Mozart at the keyboard, or a solo recital, recorded live and uploaded on youTube! However, failing this, we do possess an extraordinary description of Mozart’s genius both as composer and performer in this remarkable report published in the Augsburg newspaper Augsburgische Staats-und Gelehrten Zeitung, October 28, 1777: “Herr Chevalier Mozart, a son of the famous Salzburg

musician… gave a concert on the fortepiano…Everything was extraordinary, tasteful and admirable. The composition is thorough, fiery, manifold and simple; the harmony so full, so strong, so unexpected, so elevating; the melody so agreeable, so playful, and everything so new; the rendering on the fortepiano so neat, so clean, so full of expression, and yet at the same time extraordinarily rapid so that one hardly knew what to give attention to first… all the hearers were enraptured. One found here mastery in the thought, mastery in the performance, mastery in the instruments, all at the same time.”

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The Artist

SKristian Bezuidenhout was born in South Africa in 1979.  He began his studies in Australia, completed them at the Eastman School of Music and now lives in London.  After initial training as a modern pianist with Rebecca Penneys, he explored early keyboards, studying harpsichord with Arthur Haas, fortepiano with Malcolm Bilson and continuo playing and performance practice with Paul O’Dette.  Bezuidenhout first gained international recognition at the age of 21 after winning the prestigious first prize as well as the audience prize in the Bruges Fortepiano Competition.

Bezuidenhout is a frequent guest artist with the world’s leading ensembles including Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Orchestre des Champs Elysées, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Concerto Köln, Chamber Orchestra of Europe, Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra and Collegium Vocale Gent, in many instances assuming the role of guest director. He has performed with celebrated artists including John Eliot Gardiner, Philippe Herreweghe, Frans Brüggen, Trevor Pinnock, Christopher Hogwood, Pieter Wispelwey, Daniel Hope, Jean-Guihen Queyras, Isabelle Faust, Viktoria Mullova, Carolyn Sampson and Mark Padmore.

In 2009, Bezuidenhout embarked on a long-term recording relationship with Harmonia Mundi. 

Recordings include Mozart Violin Sonatas with Petra Müllejans, and Volumes 1–6 of the complete keyboard music of Mozart (Volume 1 was awarded a Diapason Découverte and Caecilia Prize and Volume 3 was recently awarded the German Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik).  Other projects for Harmonia Mundi include Mendelssohn piano concertos with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra and Schumann Dichterliebe with Mark Padmore—both recordings won the Edison Award. His recording of Beethoven violin sonatas with Viktoria Mullova (ONyX label) won an ICMA and an ECHO Klassik award for the best chamber music album of 2011. In 2013 Bezuidenhout was awarded the ECHO Klassik Award for Concerto Recording of the year (Mozart Concertos with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra) and nominated as Gramophone Magazine’s Artist of the year.

Recent concerts include appearances with the Mozarteum Orchester Salzburg, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra and Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra, and in 2014/15 he performs with Seattle Symphony, Chicago Symphony, Concertgebouworkest, Berner Symphonieorchester, English Concert, Il Giardino Armonico and returns to Rotterdam Philharmonic. In recital he performs in New york, London, Wroklaw, Salzburg, Barcelona and Frankfurt, among others.

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EMSI wishes to thank…

The EMSI Volunteer Guild 2014–15The Volunteer Ushers at Alix Goolden Performance Hall

Mary Scobie, graphic designer for EMSI concert programmes, print media, and websiteDavid Strand, maintainer of the EMSI website

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