Ordonez: Symphonies
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Karl von Ordonez (1734-1786): Symphonies Karl von Ordonez cut a somewhat unusual figure in the musical life of eighteenth-century Vienna for unlike all of...
Karl von Ordonez (1734-1786): Symphonies
Karl von Ordonez cut a somewhat unusual figure in the
musical life of eighteenth-century Vienna for unlike all
of his important contemporaries he was not a
professional musician. For most of his working life he
was employed by the Lower Austrian Regional Court
and his musical activities, both as a performer and
composer, were pursued in his spare time. It was not, it
seems, the promise of an exciting and glamorous career
in local government that was responsible for luring him
away from life as a professional musician but rather the
circumstances of his birth. Ordonez's family belonged
to the minor nobility and as such a professional musical
career would not have befitted a man of his rank.
However much talent might have been admired in
Viennese society - and one close contemporary of
Ordonez, Carl Ditters, was even raised to the ranks of
the nobility by the Empress - an enormous gulf
separated the meanly-born professional musician from
even the minor nobility. Mozart felt this acutely and
decades later Beethoven, for all his self-professed
egalitarianism, fought an unsuccessful legal battle to
establish his own claim to nobility. In the circumstances
it is perhaps unsurprising that Ordonez opted to pursue
his musical career as an amateur. This difference in
status did not in any way diminish his seriousness of
intent as a composer and his music has received
significant attention from scholars in recent years.
Nothing has come to light concerning Ordonez's
general education although it seems likely that he would
have attended a Ritterakademie, a boarding-school for
the nobility, and, in preparation for a career in the civil
service, gone on to study law at the University of
Vienna. Nor is anything known about his musical
training although his contemporary reputation as a
violinist suggests that he studied the instrument from an
early age and, no doubt, was also a proficient keyboardplayer.
Of his training in composition it is not possible
even to hazard a guess.
Ordonez's professional activities included
membership of two prestigious performing bodies, the
k.k. Hof- und Kammermusik (where he was employed
as a Kammermusikus) and the Tonkünstler-Societat in
which he was active both as a violinist and as a
composer. Ordonez was one of the earliest members of
the Tonkünstler-Societat, an organisation devoted to
raising money through public concerts for the widows
and orphans of musicians, and maintained a close
association from 1771, the year of its foundation, until
1784. He also performed regularly in the houses of the
nobility. Dr Charles Burney heard him play at a musical
dinner party in 1772 held in the residence of the British
Ambassador in Vienna, Lord Stormont, and reported:
Between the vocal parts of this delightful concert, we
had some exquisite quartets, by Haydn, executed in the
utmost perfection; the first violin by M. Startzler
[J. Starzer], who played the Adagios with uncommon
feeling and expression; the second violin by M.
Ordonetz; Count Brühl played the tenor, and M. Weigel
[F.J. Weigl], an excellent performer on the violoncello,
the base. All who had any share in this concert, finding
the company attentive, and in a disposition to be
pleased, were animated to that true pitch of enthusiasm,
which, from the ardour of the fire within them, is
communicated to others, and sets all around in a blaze;
so that the contention between the performers and
hearers, was only who should please, and who should
applaud the most!
The onset of pulmonary tuberculosis forced
Ordonez to resign both his professional playing
appointments in 1783 and the same year he was forced
to retire on half-salary from his position with the Lower
Austrian Land Court. The last three years of his life
were spent in sickness and poverty. His desperate
financial circumstances reduced him to a precarious
existence in shared lodgings and at the time of his death
he possessed only a few items of clothing and his total
estate, including outstanding pension payments, was
valued at less than the cost of his funeral. His son-inlaw,
Joseph Niedlinger, a minor government official in
the Upper Building Management Division of the court,
paid the outstanding balance and saved the nobleman
the ignominy of a pauper's grave.
Ordonez's output as a composer leaves us in no
doubt that he regarded himself as a professional in all
but name. In addition to his two operatic works, a
marionette opera, Musica della Parodia d'Alceste and a
Singspiel, Diesmal hat der Mann den Willen, Ordonez is
known to have composed a significant number of sacred
works (now lost), a large corpus of chamber music of
which the 27 authenticated string quartets are of
particular importance, a violin concerto and no less than
73 symphonies. The symphonies were widely
disseminated in manuscript copies and the celebrated
polymath Abbe Stadler noted that they "received great
applause". Seven of these works found their way into
the thematic catalogues and supplements published by
Breitkopf between the years 1766 and 1778, a
respectable number but low nonetheless in comparison
with his close contemporaries Hofmann, Wanhal and
Dittersdorf. He was it seems a respected rather than
celebrated composer, a consequence, no doubt, of the
strange half-life he lived as an artist.
Although Ordonez was a part-time composer, he
was no dilettante. Neither was he a slave to fashion or
convention. His liking for contrapuntal textures gives
much of his music a very distinctive quality and his
sophisticated experiments with cyclic unity, particularly
in the string quartets, reveal a highly original musical
mind. The five symphonies featured on this recording
bear eloquent testimony to Ordonez's talents as a
composer.
As is the case with the works of so many
eighteenth-century composers it is impossible to
establish an accurate chronology for the Ordonez
symphonies or to learn anything much about the
circumstances of their composition. Indeed, of the
present works, only the Sinfonia in A (Brown A4) and
Sinfonia in G minor (Brown Gm8) possess any external
corroborative references that give a clue to their
composition date: both are listed in the famous
Quartbuch catalogue and must have been composed no
later than 1775, the generally agreed date for the latestknown
works in this catalogue.
If the number of extant copies of a work is any
indicator of its contemporary popularity then the
Sinfonia in C (Brown C2) was undoubtedly one of the
best known of Ordonez's symphonies. One of the
reasons for this may lie in its beautiful slow movement
with its striking employment of violin and violoncello
obbligati. Ordonez was by all accounts a good violinist
and it is tempting to think that the solo violin part was
first performed by the composer himself. The work is
also somewhat unusual in being a three-movement
symphony with a slow introduction to the first
movement. This Adagio introduction adds a certain
weight to the work and there are also subtle thematic
links between it and the ensuing Allegro molto. That no
concentrated attempt is made within the work as a
whole to establish a deeper unification of the cycle may
indicate that it represents one of Ordonez's earliest
experiments with this technique.
A number of scholars have drawn attention to
Ordonez's predilection for minor key works although
the proportion of minor key symphonies in his oeuvre
does not differ significantly from that found in the
works of Haydn, Wanhal and Dittersdorf. The choice of
B minor, however, is unusual and suggests a composer
sensitive to the tonal nuances of different keys. Of the
two G minor symphonies, one (Gm8) was composed not
later than 1775 (on the evidence of its inclusion in the
Quartbuch catalogue) and is, therefore, roughly
contemporaneous with Haydn's so-called Sturm und
Drang symphonies. The symphony is delicately scored
for a pair of oboes and strings; the Quartbuch entry also
specifies horns although these are not listed on the
wrapper of the sole-surviving source. Ordonez makes
limited but effective use of the oboes in the outer
movements and introduces two solo violas in the central
movement which creates a warm, sensuous wash of
string colour. The composition date of the other G
minor symphony is unknown but its polish and
structural balance suggest that is it probably one of his
later works.
Ordonez possessed good technique as a composer, a
lively musical imagination and a highly-developed
sense of orchestral colour. His symphonies contain
much that is beautiful and, in their own way, original.
They achieved modest fame in his lifetime and like so
much music of the period fell quickly into oblivion. As
more has been learned about the musical milieu in
which he worked Ordonez's stature as a composer has
grown and his own unique musical voice has come to be
appreciated on its own terms.
Allan Badley
Symphony in A major, Brown A4 (more info)
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I. Allegro piu presto con franchezza - 3:39
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II. Andante - 4:44
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III. Allegro - 1:19
Symphony in G minor, Brown Gm7 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 3:05
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II. Andante - 3:26
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III. Allegro non troppo con garbo - 3:33
Symphony in C major, Brown C2 (more info)
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I. Adagio - 5:31
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II. Larghetto - 4:29
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III. Presto - 3:12
Symphony in B minor, Brown Bm1 (more info)
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I. Allegro maestoso e con garbo - 4:51
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II. Andantino - 4:28
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III. Rondeau non troppo presto - 4:14
Symphony in G minor, Brown Gm8 (more info)
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I. Allegro - 7:02
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II. Andante - 4:25
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III. Allegro - 3:54