San
Francisco Chamber Orchestra
"The
Devil Made Me Do It" Program Notes
April
20,21,22 - 2007
Heitor
Villa-Lobos (1887 – 1959)
American
concert-goers seldom get to experience the colorful and imaginative
works of Brazil’s best known classical composer, Heitor Villa-Lobos.
Villa-Lobos wrote operas, ballets, and immense amounts of choral,
orchestral and chamber music, including 17 string quartets. He is best
know for his Bachianas Brazileiras, eight diverse pieces
written in homage to his favorite composer, Johann Sebastian Bach.
Born
in Rio de Janeiro in 1887, young Heitor was taught cello by his
father, an avid amateur musician. The cello was to remain his
principal instrument, although he taught himself to master the guitar
as a young man. He also taught himself to improvise and compose music,
hanging out with his bohemian friends in vibrant Rio instead of
attending to his academic studies. In his early twenties, Villa-Lobos
traveled throughout Brazil and as far as Barbados, jotting down folk
melodies and observing popular Brazilian folk culture.
Back
in Rio, Villa-Lobos tried to apply himself to serious studies in
musical composition, but dropped out of the National Music Institute,
earning his living playing the cello in small groups in cafes and
cinemas. A concert in 1915 presented several of Villa-Lobos’ early
compositions; gradually his name became known around town and his
gifts recognized. In 1923, with the help of the Brazilian government,
he was able to travel to Europe, where his music was immensely
successful with Paris avante-garde.
Returning
to Brazil in 1930, Villa-Lobos dedicated much of his life to
transforming his country’s musical educational system. He wrote many
choral works to be sung by children in the public schools. In the role
of conductor, he often led programs of his own works, and became
immensely popular as a musical personality. Much as Bartok was doing
in Eastern Europe, Villa-Lobos successfully reconciled his native folk
music with European “art” music, in a highly individualistic and
distinctive manner. His colorful compositions were now introducing
Brazilian rhythms and melodies to concert-goers around the world.
After
World War Two, Villa-Lobos’ international success was assured. His
Eleventh Symphony was commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in
1955; Andres Segovia received a guitar concerto; Villa-Lobos even
wrote for Hollywood, penning the soundtrack for the MGM film “Green
Mansions” starring Audrey Hepburn and Anthony Perkins.
Igor
Stravinsky (1882 – 1971)
One of the towering musical figures of the 20th
century, Stravinsky’s 1913 Le Sacred du Printemps (“The Rite of
Spring”) was a musical “shot heard ‘round the world”,
decisively changing the course of music history. A riot broke out at
its Paris premiere; Harold Schonberg wrote in the New York Times “’Le
Sacre’, with its metrical shiftings and shattering force, in
near-total dissonance and breakaway from established canons of harmony
and melody, was a genuine explosion”. A Boston listener wrote
the following to the Boston Herald in 1924:
Who
wrote this fiendish Rite of Spring?
What right had he to write this thing,
Against our helpless ears to fling,
It’s crash, clash, cling clang, bing bang bing!
Stravinsky
was born in Oranienbaum
(renamed Lomonosov in 1948), Russia
and brought up in Saint
Petersburg. Although his father was a
professional singer, but music was considered a hobby and Stravinsky
was sent to university to study law. By 1905, however, he was
composing music under the tutelage of the great Rimsky-Korsakov. In
1909 came his “big break”, when the choreographer Sergei Diaghilev
heard Stravinsky’s music and asked him to write music for an
original ballet entitled “The Firebird (1909)”. Instantly
catapulted into international success, Stravinsky followed with
another folklore-inspired ballet, “Petrouchka (1911)”, and then
the “explosion” of “Sacred du Printemps”.
Leaving
Russia in 1910, Stravinsky spent the next twenty-nine years living in
France and Switzerland. His music took a “neo-classical” turn, as
Stravinsky wrote for smaller ensemble, based on the classical forms of
Bach, Mozart, and others. Both his L’Histoire du Soldat (“The
Soldier’s Tale”) (1918) and his Dumbarton Oaks Concerto
(1938) are masterpieces from this neo-classical period.
Later,
Stravinsky turned to serial music – following the 12-tone
innovations of Arnold Schoenberg and others, and his music became more
complex and compact. Emigrating to the United States in 1939 as war
broke out in Europe, he remained active as a composer, writer, and
performer until his death in 1971. Stravinsky was a true “man of the
world” and collaborated with many of the leading artists of the
century – not only Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes, but also
Pablo Picasso (Pulcinella, 1920) , Jean Cocteau (Oedipus
Rex, 1927), a lasting association with choreographer George
Balanchine, jazz clarinetist Artie Shaw (Ebony Concerto, 1945), and
many others. He has a star on the Hollywood
Walk of Fame at 6340 and posthumously
received the Grammy
Award for Lifetime
Achievement in 1987.
L’Histoire
du Soldat (“The Soldier’s Tale) (1918)
Stravinsky’s
“neo-classical” music looks back to the music Bach, Mozart, and
others through the prism of 20th century techniques. Much
like a Cubist painting, classical elements are broken up, rearranged,
and re-ordered; dissonant harmonies and fresh rhythmic elements add
modernistic elements to the mix.
From
this period are the three symphonies: the Symphonie des Psaumes
(Symphony of Psalms) (1930), Symphony in C (1940) and Symphony in
Three Movements (1945). Apollon Musagete (1928), Persephone (1933) and
Orpheus (1947) return us all the way back to ancient Greek mythology.
Stravinsky’s sole opera, The
Rake's Progress, is a neo-classical
masterpiece. Completed in 1951 it was premiered by New York’s Metropolitan
Opera in 1953.
Following
his three ballets with Diaghilev, Stravinsky was seeking a practical
concept for his next musical project. A simple theatrical work,
involving few instrumentalists and actors, able to be mounted on a
portable stage, sparked his imagination. He worked out the libretto
with the Swiss writer Charles Ferdinand Ramuz,
and
composed a series of brilliant “set pieces” for the reduced forces
of clarinet, bassoon, trumpet, trombone,
violin, double bass, and percussion. A narrator relates most of the
story; in the original production, several actors mimed, danced, spoke
the few lines given Soldier, Devil, and Princess.
L’Histoire
successfully combines a “naïve” folk tale with Stravinsky’s
wonderfully subtle and sophisticated neo-classical music. A soldier,
on leave from the army, is tramping back to his village to visit his
sweetheart and aging mother. Waylaid by the Devil, our hero is
persuaded to hand over his violin in return for a mysterious book,
which promises him everything he desires. “Come with me for just
three days”, coaxes the Devil. “You can teach me how to play the
violin, and I will teach you how to read your book”. What happens
next? Watch and see!