Josef Suk (1874-1935)
A Summer's Tale, Op. 29
A Winter's Tale,
Op. 9
Josef Suk belongs to the second generation
of Czech nationalist composers, after Smetana and Dvorak. He was born in 1874
in Krecovice, the son of a village schoolmaster and began to play the violin at
the age of eight and later the piano, writing his first composition, a Polka,
in 1882. At the age of eleven he entered the Prague Conservatory, studying
the violin with the director Antonin Bennewitz and theory with Josef Foerster.
His chamber-music teacher, during an extra year of study in 1891, was Hanus
Wihan, for whom Dvorak wrote his famous Cello Concerto in B minor and
who trained the distinguished Czech Quartet in which Suk played second violin
until his retirement in 1933 with the consequent disbanding of the quartet,
after giving some four thousand concerts. He studied composition first with
Karel Stecker and, after his graduation in 1891, studied with Dvorak, whose
favourite pupil he became. In 1898 he married the latter's daughter Otilie,
whose death in 1905 brought him great sadness, leading to the composition of
his Asrael Symphony. He taught composition at the Prague Conservatory,
of which he later became director, and as a teacher exercised a strong
influence over a whole generation of Czech composers. He died in 1935.
In spite of Suk's long career in chamber
music, his major compositions are largely those written for orchestra, from the
Dramatic Ovel1ure of his graduation from Dvorak's class on to a series
of symphonic poems and his powerful Asrael Symphony, dedicated to the
memory of his wife. His Musical Tale for Orchestra, Pohádka Léta (A Summer's
Tale), was first sketched out during the course of a few months in 1907, to
be orchestrated the following year. It is scored for a large orchestra of
piccolo, pairs of flutes, oboes, cor anglais and clarinets, a bass clarinet,
two bassoons, double bassoon, six French horns, three trumpets, three
trombones, tuba, timpani, triangle, cymbals, tam-tam, bass drum, piano, two
harps, celesta and strings, with an optional organ part. The work, which is
dedicated to the Czech conductor and composer Karel Kovarovic, who conducted
the first performance in Prague in January 1909, continues the emotional
narrative of the Asrael Symphony, opening with a movement under the
title Voice of Life and Consolation. Here Man is shown dogged by the
cruelty of Fate and now seeking escape in nature, his sadness represented by
the sighing chords of muted double basses over sustained and muted French horn
octaves at the outset. The first full theme to emerge is heard from violins and
oboes, the theme of man, which mounts to a dynamic climax. A distant cor
anglais introduces nature in a second theme, in which other instruments join, a
melody derived from the death theme in Asrael. This material is worked
out in traditional symphonic form, leading to an idyllic closing section,
initiated by a solo violin, accompanied by harp arpeggios, with a recurrent
figure from the first theme constantly returning. The opening sighs, now in
less poignant mood, are heard again, as the movement reaches an optimistic
conclusion.
The sun is high in the sky at noon, the
land shimmering in the haze of summer heat. The noon theme is heard from
piccolo and bass clarinet. A solo trumpet introduces a second idea and, briefly
prefaced by the timpani, the brass chants a hymn to the sun. The first theme
returns, played now by oboes and clarinets. The other thematic material is
heard again and the movement ends in tranquillity with a memory of the third
melody.
Blind musicians wander through the heat of
the summer countryside in the third movement. Suk had intended to use the
material as funeral music for a re- staging of the play Radú a Mahulena by
Julius Zeyer, for which he had earlier written incidental music. Harp chords
provide an accompaniment to two cor anglais, to be followed by a solo violin
and solo viola, mingling then with the cor anglais, as the movement moves
towards its ending.
The fourth movement, In the Power of
Phantoms, finds the protagonist in the power of the fantasmata of the
night, nightmarish creatures, interspersed with pleasanter dreams. The slower
introduction leads to a Scherzo, where soon a trumpet provides a further
thematic element. There is contrast in an Andante, in which clarinets,
including the bass clarinet, are heard at first, leading to music of romantic
intensity before the return of the scherzo material, with the trumpet
melody extended in contrapuntal mockery .Finally day banishes these
fantasmagoria and all ends at peace.
Night concludes the tale, with conflict
now resolved. Themes from the first movement, those of nature and man, are
heard, with music of tender yearning, leading to a hymn to night, the
counterpart of the earlier hymn to the sun. Finally, thematic elements
remembered from the whole work come together in gentle tranquillity.
The overture Pohádka Zimního Vecera (A
Winter's Tale or Tale of a Winter's Evening) is based on Shakespeare
and was written in 1894, to be revised in 1926. The play itself is concerned
with the jealousy of Leontes, King of Sicilia, who suspects his wife Hermione
of infidelity with his friend and guest Polixenes, King of Bohemia. He is
eventually restored to his senses and his wife, after her seeming death, to life,
when what had appeared to be her statue comes once more alive. The various
elements in the play include comedy with the cunning pedlar Autolycus and
pastoral scenes with the daughter of Leontes and Hermione, Perdita, abandoned
at birth on her father's orders and brought up in a country village. The
overture may be supposed to be programmatic, coming at a time when Dvorak
himself had turned to the composition of programmatic symphonic poems. It is
scored for a slightly smaller orchestra than the later A Summer's Tale, making
use of a single cor anglais, four horns and a single harp, in instrumentation
that in general is similar. The overture starts with a slow introduction, in
which a clarinet motif is heard against a descending figure for muted violins.
The timpani add a sinister element, before the appearance of the clarinet motif
from the oboe, developed more fully by other instruments. The music grows in
intensity, leading to an Allegro con fuoco and a theme of Wagnerian
pattern, introduced by violas and cellos. The earlier clarinet motif ushers in
a second theme. A pastoral dance theme is heard from the oboe, developed in
sequence. Earlier themes are developed and return, until conflict is resolved
and a final section, marked Tranquillo, may be supposed to bring the
happy ending that marks the close of the drama.
Keith Anderson
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
The Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra was
founded in 1929 as the first professional music ensemble to meet broadcasting
needs in Slovakia. The orchestra was first conducted by the Prague conductor
Frantisek Dyk and in the course of the past seventy years of its existence has
worked under the direction of several prominent Czech and Slovak conductors.
Ondrej Lenard was appointed its principal conductor in 1977 and a number of the
orchestra's successful performances abroad are connected with his name. When
Robert Stankovsky took over the orchestra in 1993, regular concert performances
followed, at home and abroad, with important recordings for the radio and for
foreign companies. The major recording partner of the orchestra remains HNH
International Ltd, the parent company of Naxos and Marco Polo, for which the
orchestra has so far recorded over 140 CDs. The orchestra has undertaken a
number of successful tours in Europe as well as in Japan, Korea and Hong Kong.
Andrew Mogrelia
Andrew Mogrelia, in his flourishing
career, has conducted many of the leading orchestras in Britain, including the
BBC Symphony Orchestras and the BBC Orchestras in Scotland and in Wales,
appearing in major concert-halls. Abroad he has conducted orchestras in the
Netherlands, Eire, Australia, Hong Kong and the Czech and Slovak Republics and
has toured South America with the City of London Sinfonia. In addition to
activity in the concert-hall he has worked with many dance companies, including
the English and Dutch National Ballets, the Netherlands Dance Theatre and the
Birmingham Royal Ballet. He is conductor-in-residence at the Birmingham
Conservatoire and has appeared with the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group.
His many recordings include ballet-music by Tchaikovsky, Delibes, Prokofiev and
Adam for Naxos, as well as orchestral music by Handel, Suk, Fibich and Novak
for Naxos and Marco Polo.