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CONCERT PROGRAM

February 21-23, 2014


Bernard Labadie, conductor Philip Ross, oboe Andrew Gott, bassoon Kristin Ahlstrom, violin Melissa Brooks, cello

RAMEAU Les Borades Suite (c. 1763) (1683-1764) Rigaudon Menuets Entre Gavottes pour les heures Air vif Air andante Pas de deux Contredanses HAYDN Sinfonia concertante in B-at major, Hob. I:105 (1792) (1732-1809)
Allegro Andante Allegro con spirito

Philip Ross, oboe Andrew Gott, bassoon Kristin Ahlstrom, violin Melissa Brooks, cello

INTERMISSION

HAYDN Symphony No. 22 in E-at major, The Philosopher (1764)


Adagio Presto Menuetto Finale: Presto

MOZART Symphony No. 39 in E-at major, K. 543 (1788) (1756-1791)


Adagio; Allegro Andante con moto Menuetto: Allegretto Finale: Allegro
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Bernard Labadie is the Daniel, Mary, and Francis OKeefe Guest Artist. Philip Ross is the Helen E. Nash, M.D. Guest Artist. The concert of Friday, February 21, is underwritten in part by a generous gift from Mr. and Mrs. Orrin Sage Wightman III. The concert of Friday, February 21, includes coffee and doughnuts provided by Krispy Kreme. The concert of Saturday, February 22, is underwritten in part by a generous gift from Jeanne and Rex Sinquefield. The concert of Sunday, February 23, is underwritten in part by a generous gift from Mrs. Mariam Sisson. Pre-Concert Conversations are sponsored by Washington University Physicians. These concerts are presented by the Thomas A. Kooyumjian Family Foundation. These concerts are part of the Wells Fargo Advisors series. Large print program notes are available through the generosity of Dielmann Sothebys and are located at the Customer Service table in the foyer.

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FROM THE STAGE


Eva Kozma, Assistant Principal Second Violin, on Mozarts Symphony No. 39: I love the last movement because of its energy. We play our hearts out. This is one of the last symphonies of Mozart, and at times it is very serious. Its dramatic. Youre constantly looking for the Mozartean lightness, the happiness, but the chords are diminished. Whenever I play Mozart I think of my grandmother. She loved Mozart. She was concertmaster in my hometown orchestra in Romania, and she once said in a radio interview that Mozart made the most genial music ever written, pure and beautiful. I think so too.

DILIP VISHWANAT

A view of the second violins, Eva Kozma at far right.

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VARIED INVENTION
BY PA U L SC H I AVO

TIMELINKS
1763-64 RAMEAU Les Borades Suite HAYDN Symphony No. 22 in E-at major, The Philosopher Britain, Spain, and France sign Treaty of Paris, ending Seven-Year War or French-Indian War, with France relinquishing territories in the New World 1788-92 MOZART Symphony No. 39 in E-at major, K. 543 HAYDN Sinfonia concertante in B-at major, Hob. I:105 French Revolution erupts, Declaration of Rights of Man issued

The four compositions that comprise the program for our concert were written by three composers within the space of barely 30 years, a relatively short span of time in historical terms. This and the fact that two of these composers were close friends and influenced by each others work might promise a certain stylistic homogeneity. But quite the opposite is true. Each of these works is quite distinct in sound, form, and character. We begin with a suite of dances in the French Baroque manner, a style that was out of date in 1763, when this music was composed, but kept alive through the remarkable longevity of its author, Jean-Philippe Rameau. Next comes a concerto, but with the unusual feature of using not one but four solo instruments. Following intermission we hear symphonies by Joseph Haydn and his friend Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The latter work presents what we have come to think of as the classical symphonic design, with fast opening and closing movements framing a slow movement and minuet. But Haydns Philosopher Symphony follows a different and quite unusual course, opening with a dignified slow movement marked by contrapuntal textures, and using unusual instrumental colors throughout. Together, these four pieces indicate something of the variety of compositional invention that marked the last third of the 18th century, an exceptionally fertile period in the history of Western music.

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JEAN-PHILIPPE RAMEAU Les Borades Suite A LONG AND VARIED CAREER Jean-Philippe Rameau was, by any measure, one of the most remarkable composers of the Baroque era. Born in France but trained in Italy, he spent his early years as an organist and composer of sacred music and keyboard pieces. By 1723 he had moved to Paris, where he held no regular position but seems to have earned his living as a freelance musician and writer. (Among other things, he authored several famous treatises on music theory.) At age 50, Rameau embarked on a new career as a composer for the theater. His opera Hippolyte et Aricie, which premiered in 1733, created a sensation in Paris, due to the unprecedented dramatic power of its music, and the composer found himself at the center of a critical storm, with rival factions alternately praising and condemning the intensity of his style. Undaunted by this controversy, Rameau wrote a new opera in nearly each of his remaining 30 years. Our concert begins with selections from Rameaus last opera, Les Borades. A great deal of uncertainty surrounds the history of this piece. The work was commissioned by the Paris Opra, which put it into rehearsal in 1763, the year before Rameau died. But there is no evidence that it was actually performed. Concert presentations of excerpts from the score occurred in the 1890s and again in the 1960s in France, but the first staged production, at least the first that anyone knows of, was not given until 1982. STORY AND SPECTACLE The tale related in Les Borades centers on Queen Alphise of Bactria, an ancient kingdom in the Near East, who spurns the Boreas, god of the wind, in favor of a young mortal she loves. Angered by this affront, the god raises a mighty gust that carries off the disobedient queen. But in a classic deus ex machina reversal, Apollo intervenes and declares that Alphises beloved is actually his offspring and a distant descendant of Boreas also, so all ends well. Les Borades fulfills the traditional requirement of French Baroque opera for an extensive use of dance, either to advance the plot or
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Baptized September 25, 1683, Dijon Died September 12, 1764, Paris First Performance Unknown (see below) STL Symphony Premiere This week Scoring 2 utes 2 piccolos 2 oboes 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 2 horns strings Performance Time approximately 15 minutes

Born March 31, 1732, Rohrau, Austria Died May 31, 1809, Vienna First Performance March 9, 1792, in London, under the composers direction STL Symphony Premiere January 23, 1953, with Leonard Arner, oboe, Norman Herzberg, bassoon, Harry Farbman, violin, and Dodia Feldin, cello, Eleazar De Carvalho conducting Most Recent STL Symphony Performance November 2, 2008, with Barbara Orland, oboe, Andrew Gott, bassoon, Alison Harney, violin, and Melissa Brooks, cello, Nicholas McGegan conducting Scoring solo oboe solo bassoon solo violin solo cello ute 2 oboes bassoons 2 horns 2 trumpets timpani strings Performance Time approximately 22 minutes

simply as picturesque diversion. Rameaus score is filled with gavottes, minuets, rigaudons and other dances popular with the French aristocracy during the 18th century. These numbers would have been occasions for lavish stage spectacles during Rameaus day, sumptuously choreographed and costumed tableaux of the kind that long typified opera in Paris. Our suite includes a selection of the dance movements Rameau composed for Les Borades. Most of these require no comment. But the Gavotte pour les heures has unusual dramatic significance. Late in the opera, the bereft Arabis is cheered by the arrival of Polyhymnia, the muse of prayers and hymns. With her is a company of allegorical figures representing the seasons, zephyrs, and hours. The latter engage in a dance that inspired Rameau to an ingenious bit of musical onomatopoeia, with piccolos whirring over a rhythmically steady accompaniment to imitate the workings of a clock. JOSEPH HAYDN Sinfonia concertante in B-flat major, Hob. I:105 A DIFFERENT KIND OF CONCERTO For modern listeners, the concerto is almost always a composition for a single featured instrumentalist, usually in the role of a heroic virtuoso, with orchestral accompaniment. But this modern conception of the concerto was not firmly established until around the beginning of the 19th century. Prior to that, concertos for two or several solo instruments were common. During the second half of the 18th century such works were usually identified by the term sinfonia concertante. Mozart produced several works of this kind. His great colleague and friend Joseph Haydn composed only one, but it is of exceptional quality. Haydn wrote his Sinfonia concertante in B-flat early in 1792, during the first of his two celebrated visits to London, where the now famous composer had come to preside over a series of concerts featuring his music. The work employs a solo quartet of oboe, bassoon, violin, and cello, and is cast in the usual three-movement concerto. The first movement is built on themes that are by
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turns graceful and robust. Haydn, in contrast to the practice of his time, does not hold the solo quartet in abeyance during the initial paragraph, but has it assist the orchestra in setting forth his musical materials. There is a lively interplay among the soloists, and all four of them partake in the cadenza Haydn provides near the end of the movement. This opening is followed by a gentle Andante that finds the solo group in intimate conversation with only the barest orchestral accompaniment. The last movement takes the form of an amusing music lesson. The orchestra begins by offering a vigorous phrase in unison, but immediately the solo violin cuts in. No, no, its recitative seems to implore. Try again. The orchestra does so, but again the violin interrupts: Not that way this way. And for the remainder of this charming finale the four soloists demonstrate a succession of nimble scales and other figures, which the poor orchestra struggles to imitate as best it can. JOSEPH HAYDN Symphony No. 22 in E-flat major, The Philosopher HAYDN IN HUNGARY Before visiting London, Haydn had served as court composer to the Hungarian prince Nikolaus Esterhzy. This situation entailed both challenge and opportunity. The Esterhzy court orchestra consisted only of a small group of strings with pairs of horns and oboes, a bassoon, and occasional flutes. With these modest instrumental forces Haydn had to produce a continually varied stream of music. The most important result of that process was a series of more than 80 symphonies that Haydn composed during his three-decade Esterhzy tenure. With the Esterhzy court orchestra as his laboratory, Haydn was able to test his musical ideas. Particularly during the 1760s, he experimented with different types and arrangements of movements, sought unexpected turns of melody and harmony, and deployed his musicians in novel ways. His Symphony in E-flat major, No. 22 in the standard listing of his works, employs all these stratagems.
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First Performance Unknown, but certainly at Esterhza, the palatial estate of the Hungarian prince Nikolaus Esterhzy, in 1764, under the composers direction STL Symphony Premiere October 14, 1971, James Levine conducting the only previous performance Scoring 2 English horns bassoon 2 horns strings Performance Time approximately 16 minutes

SYMPHONIC ANOMALIES The first unusual feature of this composition is its scoring. Prince Nikolauss oboists evidently had English horns at their disposal, and in the present work Haydn used those instruments in place of oboes. (This is the only one of his symphonies in which we find this unusual instrumentation.) The result is an uncommonly rich and deep orchestral sound, some perilously high horn writing notwithstanding. But sonority isnt the only anomaly. Though the work unfolds in four movements, these do not yield the usual pattern of a Classical-period symphony. Haydn reverses the fast and slow movements normally found at the outset, beginning the piece with a stately Adagio. The initial movement brings another surprise. Here a broad theme for the winds plays over a steadily marching accompaniment by the strings. This theme has the character of a liturgical chant, and both that character and the texture of its setting here recall the chorale prelude, a form widely cultivated by composers during the 17th and early 18th centuries. The reference to this older and learned compositional genre, together with the measured gravity of the music, presumably inspired the name The Philosopher, by which this symphony is now known. The second movement conveys that bracing energy Haydn so often brought to the fast movements of his symphonies. We then hear a minuet, with a contrasting central episode featuring the distinctive timbres of the winds. This anticipates the colors of the closing movement. Here, rapid-fire horn calls are echoed by the English horns, a striking effect. WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART Symphony No. 39 in E-flat major, K. 543 A MOZARTIAN MYSTERY In the summer of 1788, Mozart completed three extraordinary symphonies, the last such works he would compose. This final trilogy, as it is often called, poses two of the most intriguing and enduring questions of Mozarts biography: Why did the composer write these works, and did he ever hear them performed? Mozart scholars have proposed several possibilities for explaining the composition of these three late symphonies, but even their most persuasive theories remain unproved for lack of definitive documentary evidence. And so, the mystery of the composers last three symphonies remains just that. But of the musics value there is no doubt. No symphonic compositions of the 18th century surpass the final trilogy in strength, intricacy, or beauty, and only Mozarts slightly earlier Prague Symphony and the later London symphonies of Haydn even approach them in this respect. Less turbulent and impassioned than the Symphony in G minor, K. 550, and not so outwardly brilliant as the Jupiter Symphony, K. 551, the Symphony in E-flat Major, K. 543, has long been the least appreciated portion of the final trilogy. It deserves better, for its musical substance and compositional details are scarcely less admirable than those of its more famous siblings. Like the other two symphonies of the final trilogy, this work follows the four-movement sequence that by the 1780s had become the usual format of symphonic composition. Unlike them, its plan includes an introduction in slow tempo to begin the first movement. This preface begins in a splendid,
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even ceremonious, manner, with sonorous chords in formal rhythms punctuated by timpani strokes and falling scale figures. (The latter will reappear, in a more animated context, during the main body of the movement.) The music then becomes quiet and expectant, its mounting sense of anticipation making the onset of the ensuing Allegro all the more effective. There follows a slow movement that begins softly and placidly in the string choir alone. Beginning with its second paragraph, however, Mozart touches on some dark harmonies and stormy textures. The outbursts never last long, though, and the movement as a whole conveys a beautiful and seemingly nocturnal atmosphere. The third movement presents a robust minuet whose central episode uses an Alpine folk dance melody, sung here by the clarinet. Mozart constructs the finale on a single swift and energetic theme, a procedure often used by Haydn in his symphonic finales. This subject proves the source of myriad developments, as Mozart varies and extends his melodic material in characteristically imaginative fashion.

Born January 27, 1756, Salzburg Died December 5, 1791, Vienna First Performance Unknown STL Symphony Premiere January 23, 1914, Max Zach conducting Most Recent STL Symphony Performance February 11, 2006, Roberto Abbado conducting Scoring ute 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 2 horns 2 trumpets timpani strings Performance Time approximately 29 minutes

Program notes 2014 by Paul Schiavo

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BERNARD LABADIE
DANIEL, MARY, AND FRANCIS OKEEFE GUEST ARTIST

Bernard Labadie most recently conducted the St. Louis Symphony in April 2013.

Bernard Labadie has established himself worldwide as one of the leading conductors of the Baroque and Classical repertoire, a reputation that is closely tied into his work with Les Violons du Roy and La Chapelle de Qubec, both of which he founded and continues to lead as music director. With these two ensembles he regularly tours Canada, the U.S., and Europe. Highlights of the 2013-14 season include reengagements with the New York Philharmonic, Kansas City Symphony, New World Symphony, and Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Appearances overseas will include concerts with the Malaysian Philharmonic, Auckland Philharmonia, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg, WDR Sinfonieorchester (Cologne), Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra (Munich), NDR Sinfonieorchester (Hamburg), Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, and a European Tour with Les Violons du Roy. PHILIP ROSS
HELEN E. NASH, M.D. GUEST ARTIST

Philip Ross made his St. Louis Symphony solo debut in January 2008.

Philip Ross grew up surrounded by world-class oboists. His father, Dan, is a well-known oboist and maker of gouging machines, which are highprecision cutting tools essential for reed-making. With at least one of Dans machines in every major North American orchestra, Jonesboro, Arkansas is a revolving door of oboists making their pilgrimage to have their machines serviced. Philip Ross holds degrees from the Eastman School of Music and the Chicago College of Performing Arts where he studied with Richard Killmer and Alex Klein respectively. He has made repeat appearances as guest principal oboe of the San Francisco Symphony, toured with the Chicago Symphony, and recorded with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. He also takes part in the St. Barts Music Festival. Philip Ross enjoys playing music with his wife and fellow oboist, Laura. The oboe couple welcomed their first child in April 2013.
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ANDREW GOTT Prior to taking the position of Associate Principal Bassoon of the St. Louis Symphony in 2006, Andrew Gott was Principal Bassoon of the Virginia Symphony Orchestra under the baton of JoAnn Falletta. He has also played Principal Bassoon with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra and the Woodlands Symphony Orchestra. He has served on the faculty at the Governors School for the Arts, Old Dominion University, Christopher Newport University, and Ball State Bassoon Camp. Gott received his Bachelor of Music from Ball State University and his Master of Music from the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University, where he studied with Ben Kamins. Andrew Gott was born and raised in Bolivar, Missouri.

Andrew Gott was a member of the ensemble that most recently performed Haydns Sinfonia concertante, in November 2008.

KRISTIN AHLSTROM Kristin Ahlstrom joined the St. Louis Symphony in 1996, and was appointed to the Associate Principal Second Violin chair in 2001. She is a member of the Ilex Piano Trio along with her husband, pianist Peter Henderson, and St. Louis Symphony cellist Anne Fagerburg; and is also the violinist of a string trio featuring St. Louis Symphony musicians Shannon Farrell Williams and Bjorn Ranheim. Ahlstrom has played chamber music recitals as well as orchestral concerts as a member of the Sun Valley (Idaho) Summer Symphony since 2001, and has been a guest artist in Indiana Universitys Summer Music series every year since 2006. She and her husband live in St. Louiss South City along with their lively, sweet dog Zinni.

Kristin Ahlstrom most recently performed as a soloist with the St. Louis Symphony in January 2008.
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MELISSA BROOKS Melissa Brooks has been a member of the St. Louis Symphony since 1992. She is a native of New York City, where from 1977-88 she attended the pre-college division of the Juilliard School. Brooks received her undergraduate degree from the New England Conservatory where she studied with Laurence Lesser. She graduated from both schools with Distinction in Performance. Brooks has performed chamber and solo concerts throughout the country, including a duo concert with the late cellist Janos Starker. She has won numerous awards and honors and was nominated by Leonard Bernstein for an Avery Fisher Career Grant in 1988. Her activities in the community include creating and participating in numerous benefit concerts throughout the year as well as engagement in advocacy work. Melissa Brooks is Missouri Chapter leader for the national organization, Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.

Melissa Brooks was also a member of the ensemble that most recently performed Haydns Sinfonia concertante, in November 2008.

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A BRIEF EXPLANATION
You dont need to know what andante means or what a glockenspiel is to enjoy a St. Louis Symphony concert, but its always fun to know stuff. For example, what does Hob. I:105 mean? Hob.: Hob. is the abbreviation for the Hoboken catalogue of Haydns works; Hoboken does not refer to New Jersey or have anything to do with the closing of toll booths, rather, Anthony van Hoboken (1887-1983), who took on the enormous task of compiling the definitive catalogue of Haydns many works; Hob. numbers include a roman numeral followed by an Arabic figure

PLAYING MOZART:

EVA KOZMA, ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL SECOND VIOLIN


Symphony No. 39 is a difficult piece for string players, because there is so much character that needs to stand out. Its operatic. Note lengths need to be precise. We need to listen to each other so much and play together. Not everyone can play Mozart. People want to vibrate at the end of a line, become more romantic. That doesnt work for Mozart. The music is very transparent. If you dont respect the character or the lines, it will make a big mush. In this symphony Mozart gives the second violins a lot of the main theme. Were not just accompanying eighth notes. In other works we may be part of the background, or supporting the harmony. In this case were pretty much equal.

Eva Kozma

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DILIP VISHWANAT

YOU TAKE IT FROM HERE


If these concerts have inspired you to learn more, here are suggested source materials with which to continue your explorations. Cuthbert Girdlestone, Jean-Philippe Rameau: His Life and Work Dover Press A new edition of the definitive Englishlanguage biography Opra National de Paris, Jean-Philippe Rameau, Les Borades 2 DVD Set A sumptuous film of the opera, with a superb cast David Wyn Jones, editor, Oxford Composer Companions: Haydn Oxford University Press A fount of enlightening information on Haydn, his music, his milieu, his career, his relationships Robert W. Gutman, Mozart: A Cultural Biography Mariner Books An excellent account of the composer and his times

Read the program notes online at stlsymphony.org/planyourvisit/programnotes Keep up with the backstage life of the St. Louis Symphony, as chronicled by Symphony staffer Eddie Silva, via stlsymphony.org/blog The St. Louis Symphony is on

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