Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
Divertimento in D Major, K. 136
Allegro
Andante
Presto
Divertimento in B Flat Major, K. 137
Andante
Allegro di molto
Allegro assai
Divertimento in F Major, K. 138
Allegro
Andante
Presto
Divertimento in D Major, K. 205
Largo - Allegro
Menuetto
Adagio
Menuetto
Finale: Presto
In 1772 Mozart was
again at home in Salzburg. His first journeys abroad, at the age of six, had
brought him great fame as an infant prodigy, and with his sister he had
performed w hat seemed miracles of technique and musicianship for one so young.
An extended tour took the Mozart family away from Salzburg for three and a half
years, during which time they attracted the curiosity of audiences in Paris,
London, Holland and throughout Germany. Late in 1769 Mozart left Salzburg with
his father for his first visit to Italy and there he enjoyed similar success,
now being able to fulfil a commission for an opera, Mitridate, re di Ponto, which was performed in Milan on
Boxing Day, 1770. After five months In Salzburg, Mozart returned once again to
Italy, where his Serenata, Ascanio in Alba,
was to be performed for the wedding of the Austrian Archduke Ferdinand and
Maria Beatrice d’Este, a princess of Modena.
Mozart and his
father returned to Salzburg once more in the middle of December, 1771. Next
year, before they set out again for Italy, the English musician Dr. Burney was
reporting that Wolfgang Amadeus was one more example of “early fruit being more
extraordinary than excellent”. There were others ready to agree that Mozart’s
early virtuosity had led to nothing, and in practical terms they may have been
right. In late December the Mozart’s patron, the Archbishop of Salzburg, Count
von Schrattenbach, had died, to be succeeded by Count Hieronymus von Colloredo,
a zealous but unsympathetic ruler, who was to employ Molart for ten more years
at his court, until a quarrel led to his dismissal in 1781.
The last decade of
Mozart’s life was spent in precarious independence in Vienna, with early
success, but no secure position and no adequate patronage. As a boy he had been
famous. As a young man, however successful he might appear on brief journeys
abroad, at home in provincial Salzburg he had felt slighted and undervalued,
while the establishment in Vienna seemed to have nothing to offer that might match the ambitions that
he and his father had nurtured.
The three so-called
Divertimenti, K. 136, K. 137 and K. 138, sometimes known with rather more
accuracy as the Salzburg Symphonies, have about them more of the latter than
the former. A Divertimento was generally in a series of five movements and
these three-movement works conform to the model of the Italian form of
symphony. Since they were written in Salzburg early in 1772, they may well have
been intended to serve a symphonic purpose during the coming journey to Italy,
when wind parts could have been added, as required. They precede, in any case,
a series of string quartets written in Italy later in the same year, and may
themselves be played as quartets, although once again their three movements
suggest another aim.
The first of the
set, in D major, is a model of classical clarity, its first movement, in the
usual tripartite sonata form, followed by a moving Andante. The final movement
finds a place for counterpoint in its central development, adding a further
dimension to music of concertante brilliance.
The second work, K.
137, in B flat major, opens with a gentler movement, in the expected form, and
this is followed by a rapid Allegro di molto and a final Allegro assai of
extreme clarity.
The last of the
group, K. 138, in F major, with a classical first movement and a C major slow
movement in similar form, closes with a brilliant rondo of transparent texture,
an example of a perfection of art in which technical mastery is masked by
simplicity of genius.
The Divertimento in
D major, K. 205, is true to its name. It was completed in Salzburg probably in
July, 1773, before a journey to Vienna, and probably intended as a tribute to
Maria Anna Elisabeth von Antretter, wife of the Salzburg Court War Counsellor,
for whose son Mozart was to write a celebratory Serenade later in the year,
to mark the completion of his university studies.
Scored for two
horns, a single violin line, viola, with bassoon, cello and double bass, the
Divertimento opens with a slow introduction, leading to an Allegro that varies
briefly in mood. The first Minuet has a contrasting G major Trio for the
strings alone, and is followed by a slow movement in which the viola is given a
fairer share of melody than is often the case. The Trio of the second Minuet
allows the French horns some initial prominence, and this leads to a final
movement full of witty allusion and variety well suited to the occasion for
which it was presumably designed.
Capella Istropolitana
The Capella
Istropolitana was founded in 1983 by members of the Slovak Philharmonic
Orchestra, at first as a chamber orchestra and then as an orchestra large
enough to tackle the standard classical repertoire. Based in Bratislava, its
name drawn from the ancient name still preserved in the Academia Istropolitana,
the historic university established in the Slovak and one-time Hungarian
capital by Matthias Corvinus, the orchestra works principally in the recording
studio. Other recordings by the orchestra in the Naxos series include The Best
of Baroque Music, Bach’s Brandenburg
Concertos and Mozart’s Eine
kleine Nachtmusik.
Richard Edlinger
The Austrian
conductor Richard Edlinger was born in Bregenz in 1958 and directed his first
concert at the age of seventeen. In 1982 he completed his studies in conducting
and composition at the Vienna Academy, having by then already acquired
considerable professional experience on the podium. He was the youngest
finalist in the 1983 Guido Cantelli Conductors’ Competition at La Scala, Milan,
and since 1986 he has been Artistic Director of the Capella Istropolitana, an
orchestra with which he has undertaken various European tours. Richard Edlinger
has made recent appearances with the Vienna Chamber Orchestra, the Zagreb
Philharmonic, the George Enescu Philharmonic, the orchestra of La Scala, Milan,
and the RTSI Orchestra in Lugano. In 1987 he was appointed Music Director of
Kamptal Festival in Austria.