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Program

Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy (→ bio)
The Hebrides – Overture (Fingal’s Cave), Op. 26

Jörg Widmann
Violin Concerto No. 2

Interval

Jörg Widmann
Fantasie for Clarinet

Robert Schumann (→ bio)
Symphony No. 1 in B-flat major (“Spring”), Op. 38

Featuring

Conductor

Soloist

Other information

Season tickets: Solti

The event is about 2.5 hours long.

About the event

Jörg Widmann is a musical polymath par excellence. He is not only one of the greatest living masters of his instrument, the clarinet, but also an excellent composer, orchestrator and conductor. His compositions are palatable, entertaining, thought-provoking, and inventive. His programs are harmonious and carefully selected. He often juxtaposes his own pieces with compositions of Mendelssohn or Schumann – this time, a work by each of those composers will frame Widmann’s two pieces. The personal character of the evening will be further enhanced by the short solo performance of the clarinetist after the first half, and before the interval, the soloist of the composer’s violin concerto will be his sister, Carolin Widmann, Bavarian State Prize winner, to whom it is dedicated. The music depicting the bleak Scottish landscape and Widmann’s novel sounds will be resolved by Robert Schumann’s joyous composition, conjuring spring.

At the end of the 1829 concert season in London, Mendelssohn decided to travel the Scottish countryside in search of folk songs and, of course, beautiful scenery. In his notes he could only express in twenty-one bars of music what he felt when he first saw the Hebridean islands. It is as if his own ink drawing, A View of the Hebrides, had come to life through the notes. The overture based on the sketch was only completed in December 1830, and after various versions and titles - Overture to the Lonely Island, Fingal's Islands or Fingal's Cave - took its present form in 1835. The music focuses on painting the landscape and the atmosphere, starting with a broad, undulating melody and fading into a haze of soft pizzicato.

“The violin concerto is a sacred genre”, says Jörg Widmann, who has so far composed two such pieces. BFO’s audiences were treated to his First Violin Concerto in January 2021, and now, four years later, the orchestra will perform the Second. The piece composed in 2018 was premiered in Tokyo by Carolin Widmann, its dedicatee, conducted by her brother. In the short opening movement, the violin seems to be searching for its own sound. The core of the composition is an expansive song-like romance, a spiritual internal journey led by the soloist as the narrator. The finale closes the thematically restricted, yet infinitely colorful work with fragmented but light music.

“The most beautiful circus music ever written”. This is how a New York Times critic summed up the essence of Jörg Widmann’s first major solo clarinet piece. His work composed in 1993 elaborates on the innovations of Stravinsky and Carl Maria von Weber. The circus atmosphere is evoked by commedia dell'arte characters and their imaginary dialogue; the sounds of klezmer and jazz are mixed with romantic melodies. Widmann's aim is for the performer to take the title “Fantasie” seriously and to bring their own imagination to the performance, despite the strict constraints.

The first symphony is an important milestone in the oeuvre of all post-Beethoven composers. Schumann composed his first symphony during one of the happiest and therefore most productive periods of his life, after a few aborted attempts. The Beginning of Spring, Evening, Merry Playfellows, Spring in Full Bloom - these were the programmatic titles of the movements. And although Schumann eventually removed them, the piece, sketched in four days and written in less than a month, takes its nickname from him. The brass motto of the slow introduction appears several times throughout the work. It's there in the violin melody of the song-like slow movement, in the furious scherzo trio that follows without pause and in the finale that bids farewell to spring.