Jan Levoslav Bella (1843 -
1936)
Sonata in B Flat Minor
Piece
for Piano in C Minor (two movements)
Variations
on In Pressburg by the Danube, Op. 9 (Pri Presporku na Dunaji)
Variations
on A swarm, a swarm is flying, Op. 21 (Leti, leti roj)
Sonatina
in E Minor
Four
Little Pieces
Jan Levoslav Bella was born
in 1843 in Liptovsky Sv. Mikulas,
a town of some 2800 inhabitants and a centre of Slovak nationalism. The eldest
child of a teacher, he showed an early inclination for music, encouraged by his
parents in a musical household. With the assistance of the Bishop of Zips he
was able to study from the age of ten at the Catholic school in the historic
town of Levoca (Leutschau}, a place that after 1867 became greatly subject to
Hungarian influence. He remained here for six years, receiving a good general
education, and in music acquiring further practical ability as a violinist,
pianist and organist, as weIl as in choral singing and theoretical musical
studies. He owed much here to his teacher Leopold Dvorak, whose name he took at
confirmation, later to be changed into its Slovak form of Levoslav. He
completed the last two years of his studies in Banska Bystrica (Neusohl}, where
he began his theological studies, while developing his musical interests,
writing liturgical music and profiting from the cultural opportunities the
place offered. There followed two years of study at the pazmaneum in Vienna,
where he involved hirnself in the musical reforms of the Cecilian movement and
conducted the choir of the Pazmaneum, which performed in its own chapel and in
the University Church. Vienna also offered opportunities of contact with some of
the leading musicians of the time, including Sirnon Sechter, from whom Schubert
had once sought lessons and with whom Bella was now able to study.
In 1865 Bella returned to
Bansk8 Bystrica, where he was ordained priest the following year. As a mernber of the cathedral clergy he was
able to devote hirnself to music, teaching singing and music at the theological
serninary and writing liturgical music, in addition to secular vocal and
instrumental compositions. It was here that he met Ede Rernenyi, the Hungarian
violinist with whorn Brahms had undertaken his first concert tour in 1853. In
1869 Bella moved to Krernnica (Krernnitz), where wider opportunities offered,
taking the position of city director of music, with its manifold duties. Here,
in 1870, he conducted a concert to commernorate the centenary of the birth of
Beethoven, concentrating his attention very largely thereafter on the great
classical composers, while hirnself writing works on a larger scale, in
particular compositions for solo voices, chorus and orchestra, some of which
were performed in Vienna. Travel in Germany revealed to hirn the repertoire of
romantic and neo-romantic music and literature, the music of Schumann and the
writing of Heine and of Chamisso. He also turned his attention increasingly to
Slovak music.
1881 marked a turning-point
in Bella's career, when, leaving the priesthood, he took a position as Stadtkapellmeister
and cantor in Hermannstadt (Sibiu), now in Romania, a much larger city than Kremnica,
with a considerable German population. In 1882 he married and in an active career enjoyed considerable success
as a conductor, with a proficient orchestra and choir, and the possibility of
opera. He was able to direct performances of conternporary works and was an
important figure in music education'in the city, during the forty years he
spent there, establishing links with the leading musicians of the time, including
Brahms, Hans von Bülow, Dohn8nyi, Joachirn and Richard Strauss, in addition to
Liszt, with whorn he had had an earlier connection. It was in Hermannstadt that
he completed his own opera Wieland der Schmied (Wieland the Smith),
first staged in Bratislava in Slovak translation in 1926. He retired in 1921,
when he moved to Vienna to live with his daughter, spending the last eight
years of his life in Bratislava, where he died in 1936.
Bella w rote his B flat
minor Piano Sonata in 1882, the year of his marriage. The first of the four movements opens with all the
stormy activity of Liszt, its first subject followed bya more Iyrical second
subject i1:1the relative major key. The movement, after much use of a short
rhythmic motif, turns to a contrapuntal treatment of the material, before
ending in the spirit in which it had begun. The G flat major slow movement
starts with gently arpeggiated chords, alternating major and minor, and an
expressive melody. A maestoso section introduces a contrapuntal element,
leading back to the gently Iyrical opening theme, its complementary secondary
theme and areturn to the more forceful maestoso. The first theme returns
to end the movement. There is some ambiguity of key in the opening of the D
major Scherzo, although the key is eventually firm I y established, to
allow the appearance of a more Iyrical melody. There is a contrasting passage
in B major, the equivalent of a trio, after which the sinister opening
of the scherzo re-appears, with traces of the more expressive theme, as
the movement comes to an end. The last movement opens with the strength of
Schumann at his most robust, giving way to music of more tenderness, before aC
sharp minor funeral march. Counterpoint
again appears as the material is developed and the sonata moves toward its
triumphant B flat major conclusion.
Bella's Piano Piece in C
minor, the first of two movements of an unfinished sonata, opens with an
introductory flourish, before the announcement of the principal theme. This is followed by a second section in which
thematic material is presented with a running triplet accompaniment and then
with semiquavers, before a modulation to F minor, the principal theme now
augmented and accompanied by a quaver counterpoint. Further adventurous
modulations now lead to the key of D flat and areturn of the gentier secondary
theme, with its triplet accompaniment, turning again to semiquavers, followed
by the principal theme in its original form. A second movement, in A flat
major, opens with a gent I y descending theme, with a running contrapuntal
accompaniment. This re-appears to frame passag es of greater force, finally
bringing the piece to aserene conclusion.
The Variations on In Pressburg,
by the Danube were first
published in Banska Bystrica in 1866, described on the title-page as Variations
sur une chanson populaire slovaque. The work starts with a dramatic introduction, with fragments of a
dance, suggesting apreparatory improvisation. The theme of the song is
presented in the simplest form. The first variation has a semiquaver
accompaniment, while the second variation opens in a lower register, and is
marked pastorale, moving on to a passage marked con brio and a
conclusion con energia. The third and final variation presents the theme
as a mazurka, before the syncopations of the conclusion. Bella's Variations
on Letf, letf roj open with the theme itself in C sharp minor, followed by
a rapid variation and a second of more moderate speed, now in the enharmonic
tonic major of D flat. The set of variations ends with a Finale that
returns to the original key in an imaginative derivative of the material.
Bella's
Sonatina in E minor was first published in the Hungarian Viktor Fellegi's
Apollo, a periodical in which a number of his compositions appeared. It was written in 1870, during the composer's
time in Kremnica. The repeated exposition has more than a suggestion of
national dance rhythms and there is abrief development, before the
re-appearance of the first theme in the key of B minor and a fuller
recapitulation.
The Four
Little Pieces, written between 1866 and 1869 at Banska Bystrica, open with
a Caprice in F sharp minor, marked Allegretto, dominated by its
opening motif. It is followed bya
Vivace in A major, in which a modulating central section provides contrast.
Tripie time continues in the following F sharp minor Fairy Dance, allowing
the fairies of the title to waltz. The E minor Capriccietto, first
published in Viktor Fellegi's Apollo in Budapest, contains, in its
relatively simple form and texture, further evidence of Bella's adventurous
sense of harmony in a subtle series of unexpected modulations.