Composer, conductor, administrator, impresario, creative writer, acid
critic, sometime painter, aspiring philosopher, classical symphonist,
opera romantic, profound nationalist … blessed with the melodic
flowering of a Mozart, the technical facility of a Mendelssohn … a man,
conscious of his genius, ‘always honest and selfless in his dealings
with his fellow men and with the art he loved’ (Autobiographical Sketch,
Dresden, 14 March 1818) … put on a pedestal by all the
post-Beethovenites, the inspiration of Mahler and Debussy, of Hindemith
and Stravinsky: Carl Maria von Weber was, by universal consent, a great
pianist in an age of great virtuosi. Beethoven apart, his piano music
was in advance of almost anything else in late Napoleonic / early
Biedermeier Europe. Unschooled, dependent on the tradition of neither
Clementi nor Hummel, the pianistic forces of the day, his style
inquiringly imaginative, he explored the resources of his instrument
across its entire available compass. He took advantage of his gift for
pearling runs and athletic leaps, thirds and sixths, octaves and
glissandi. He exploited to the full his enormous long-fingered hand
stretch of around a twelfth (notwithstanding the smaller-than-modern
octave span of the Viennese Brodmann he preferred to play). ‘Having the
advantage of a very large hand’, his student and biographer Sir Julius
Benedict remembered in 1881, ‘and being able to play tenths with the
same facility as octaves, Weber produced the most startling effects of
sonority and possessed the power, like [Anton] Rubinstein, to elicit an
almost vocal quality of tone where delicacy or deep expression were
required.’
Weber’s two piano concertos date from 1810 and 1812,
the Konzertstück from 1821. Weber himself gave the first performances of
all three: the C major in Mannheim, 19 November 1810; the E flat in
Gotha, 17 December 1812; and the Konzertstück, in Berlin, 25 June 1821.
The
First has been called ‘a bridge between the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries with a stylistic foot in each’ (Neil Butterworth, 1994).
Architecturally, the Mozartean antecedents of its first movement are not
difficult to spot. Nor can a Beethoven debt be missed—notably, the
triplet octave descent leading into the reprise, an idea clearly
borrowed from the downward-rushing glissando octaves at the
corresponding point of Beethoven’s own Concerto in C. But there is
plenty of refreshing surprise, even so—the absence of a cadenza, for
example. The extraordinary, rarefied chamber scoring of the A flat
Adagio (for just two horns, viola, two cello soli and bass). And the
brilliantly dancing, cross-rhythm style of the finale (‘full of
boisterous and tempestuous zest’, Weber says), climaxing in a searing
double-octave glissando, the exhilaration of which positively consumes
the keyboard. How Weber so relished these mechanically brilliant
effects.
According to his diary, Weber bought a copy of
Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ in early 1811. His response was to write a
concerto not just in the same key, but complete with a partially muted
string Adagio in B major and a rumbustiously galloping closing rondo in
6/8. The E flat Concerto is both Weber’s ‘Emperor’ and an eloquent
Beethoven homage. Virtuoso keyboard figuration (arpeggios, octaves,
thirds) and an optional cadenza (here improvised by the soloist) profile
the first movement. The romantic Adagio Benedict called ‘a gem’. Its
gran espressione, ringingly projected melody and powerful chordal
climax, is unforgettable. On the one hand, the rondo (written first, in
the autumn of 1811) deals in extrovert gestures and a wide-skipping,
physically involving refrain. On the other, it is concerned with an
extraordinary species of teasing, fragmented orchestration—witness the
strange clarinet, flute and cello solos in the episode beginning bar
118, together with the subsequent (unpredictable) redistribution between
piano and violin (bars 251 and following). The Second Concerto was a
favourite ‘visiting card’ of Weber’s. He played it often, always to
popular acclaim.
Admired by Liszt (who published his own version,
with variants), the F minor Konzertstück was first mentioned in a
letter to the critic Rochlitz, dated 14 March 1815. This makes clear
that Weber from the outset had some kind of programmatic concerto format
in mind, since, as he put it, ‘concertos in the minor without definite,
evocative ideas seldom work with the public’ (he refers to parting,
lament, profoundest misery, consolation, reunion, jubilation).
Subsequently in 1821 (on 18 June, the day of the Berlin premiere of Der
Freischütz), he played through a version to his wife, Caroline, and
Julius Benedict, explaining (according to Benedict):
The lady
sits in her tower: she gazes sadly into the distance. Her knight has
been for years in the Holy Land: shall she ever see him again? Battles
have been fought; but no news of him who is so dear to her. In vain have
been all her prayers. A fearful vision rises to her mind—her knight is
lying on the battlefield, deserted and alone; his heart’s blood is
ebbing fast away. Could she but be by his side, could she but die with
him! She falls exhausted and senseless. But hark! What is that distant
sound? What glimmers in the sunlight from the wood? What are those forms
approaching? Knights and squires with the cross of the Crusades,
banners waving, acclamations of the people; and there!—it is he! She
sinks into his arms. Love is triumphant. Happiness without end. The very
woods and waves sing the song of love; a thousand voices proclaim its
victory.
Weber neither wrote down nor prefaced the score with these words. But, loosely, they mirror something of the music’s incident.
Structurally,
the work falls into four movements, played without a break—a slow
introduction, a brilliant Allegro passionato, (an Adagio link), a
skirling woodwind march, (a brisk transition), and a Presto giojoso 6/8
finale. Pianistically, the march is famous for just one solo entry—a
blazing octave glissando into the fortissimo tutti, timed and placed to
dramatic perfection within a context otherwise inconsequential. The
whooping glissandi of the finale are as electrifying. Hyperion
Carl Maria von Weber (1786-1826)
Piano Concerto No 1 in C major J98 Op 11 [19'39]
Piano Concerto No 2 in E flat J155 Op 32 [21'33]
Konzertstück in F minor J282 Op 79 [15'52]
Credits :
Conductor – Sir Charles Mackerras
Leader [Orchestra] – James Clark
Orchestra – Scottish Chamber Orchestra
Piano – Nikolai Demidenko
https://nitroflare.com/view/016C910E0F5CB15/The_Romantic_Piano_Concerto_–_10_♦_Weber_(1995
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