Details

Nico Muhly

“Material in E-flat” from Drones and Violin

Bryce Dessner

Bryce Dessner

Tenebre for String Ensemble and Pre-recorded Track

Erkki-Sven Tüür

Action-Passion-Illusion for String Orchestra

Toggle open/close
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Listen to Audio

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Violin Concerto No. 5

Pekka Kuusisto, violin

Admirers of Mozart’s serenades will find much to appreciate in his five violin concerti, which together mark the pinnacle of his music for violin. In the late eighteenth century, the serenade genre, rooted in the tradition of musical courtship (think of the lover, supported by his mandolin-strumming friends, singing beneath his beloved’s window), expanded to include more public celebrations: weddings, graduations, and the like. Per Mozart’s contemporary J.A.P. Schulz: “The title ‘serenade’ is also used for purely instrumental compositions, which, to honor or congratulate specific personages, are performed at dusk in front of their houses… The composer must strive to write simple, flowing melodies, set primarily to consonant rather than dissonant harmonies.”

The violin concerti, all completed in the year before Mozart’s twentieth birthday, might be heard as an extension of the serenades that mark his early years in Salzburg (Eine kleine Nachtmusik, et al.). They are untroubled works, recalling the serenades in both their compositional style and idyllic character. Equally so, the serenades, a number of which feature virtuosic solo violin writing, foreshadow the concerti. Mozart biographer Maynard Solomon surmises that the third, fourth, and fifth concerti specifically “are the highest examples of his serenade style after it has been detached from the serenade proper and reconstituted within a separate genre.”

The Fourth Violin Concerto is set in D major: a logical choice of key for the glorification of the violin, as it capitalizes on the instrument’s natural resonance. The opening Allegro bespeaks an irrepressible joie de vivre immediately from its opening measures. The opening theme is as uncomplicatedly ebullient as a nursery rhyme: a martial succession of unison Ds and a giddy outline of a D major chord prepare the way for “simple, flowing melodies, set primarily to consonant rather than dissonant harmonies” indeed.

The Andante cantabile second movement responds to the gaiety of the Allegro with sublime beauty. Solomon describes this music as “inhabit[ing] a world of plenitude, [in which] beauty is everywhere for the taking. … [T]he beauties succeed each other with a breathtaking rapidity, their outpouring of episodic interpolations suggesting that we need not linger over any single moment of beauty, for beauty is abundant, it is to be found ‘here, too,’ and ‘there, as well.’” The concerto concludes with a playfully indecisive Rondeau: the meter vacillates between a graceful 2/4 and galloping 6/8 tempo, but the music’s prevailing lightness of spirit is assured.

Patrick Castillo ©2015

About This Program

Approximate length 2:00

Join the SPCO after work for a special happy hour performance at the Ordway Concert Hall! Enjoy complimentary beer and cider (courtesy of Stella Artois), and discounts on wine and cocktails. Then bring your drinks into the hall for a one-hour concert featuring new Artistic Partner Pekka Kuusisto performing Mozart’s Violin Concerto No. 5, along with works by Bryce Dessner (The National), Nico Muhly and Erkki-Sven Tüür. Hot Indian Foods, Fork in the Road and Foxy Falafel food trucks will also be parked outside before and after the concert with appetizers and dinner available for purchase.

Happy Hour 4:30–6:00pm
Concert 6:00–7:00pm

About the music:

The extraordinary Finnish violinist and newest SPCO Artistic Partner Pekka Kuusisto leads a program that spans centuries, continents and musical genres. Soulful string works by Nico Muhly and Bryce Dessner (from the American indie-rock band The National) are interlaced within the driving, pulse pounding rhythms of Action-Passion-Illusion, a piece by contemporary Estonian composer Erkki-Sven Tüür. To close the program, Kuusisto performs Mozart’s Fifth Violin Concerto through his fresh and contemporary lens.

Stella Artois
Hot Indian Foods
Fork in the Road
Foxy Falafel

Contribute

SPCO concerts are made possible by audience contributions.

Newsletter

For exclusive discounts, behind-the-scenes info, and more:
Sign up for our email club!