Franz Schreker (1878-1934) Vorspiel zu einer grossen Oper Romantic Suite a. Idylle: Andante b. Scherzo: Prestissimo c. Intermezzo: In sanfter Bewegung d....
Franz Schreker (1878-1934)
Vorspiel zu einer grossen Oper
Romantic Suite
a. Idylle: Andante
b. Scherzo: Prestissimo
c. Intermezzo: In sanfter Bewegung
d. Tanz: Allegro vivace, etwas derb
The Austrian composer Franz Schreker must
seem a very real victim of political circumstances. For a dozen years director
of the Berlin Musikhochschule and respected as a composer and teacher, he was
forced by von Papen's government to resign his position in 1932, and the
following year was dismissed by the National Socialist Party from the work he
had been given as compensation at the Prussian Academy, where he was in charge
of the master class in composition. The destruction of his career caused a
heart-attack and he died in March, 1934.
Franz Schreker was born in Monaco, where
his father Ignaz Schreker - the spelling of the name was later changed - was
employed briefly as court photographer. His father was a native of Bohemia,
born at Golc-Jenikau, not far from Kalist, Mahler's birth-place. His mother was
from Styria, a member of an ennobled but impoverished family. The death of
Ignaz Schreker in 1888 left his wife and four children to make a life for
themselves in Vienna in relative penury, a fact that made Franz Schreker value
all the more the security his later fame was to bring him and no doubt
increased his distress, when racial persecution brought disaster.
In 1892 Schreker entered the Vienna
Conservatory with a scholarship, studying there with Zemlinsky's teacher Robert
Fuchs. Four years later his Love Song for harp and strings was performed in
London by the orchestra of the Budapest Opera, while his graduation composition
in 1900, a setting of Psalm CXVI, attracted some favourable attention in
Vienna. This was followed by his Intermezzo for strings, Opus 8, later included
in the Romantic Suite. The work was awarded first prize in a competition held
by the Neue Musikalische Presse and given its first performance in the
Musikverein in 1902.
Schreker was to go on to establish a
reputation for himself in the theatre. In 1908 his pantomime, based on the work
of Oscar Wilde, Der Geburtstag der Infantin, was given in Vienna. The
success of the ballet was followed, in 1912, by the welcome given to the opera Der
ferne Klang, performed in Frankfurt-am-Main Less successful was Das
Spielwerk und die Prinzessin, which was later to be revised. In Vienna the
work provoked open hostility, while in Frankfurt it was received coolly, if
without animosity. He achieved greater success with Die Gezeichneten and
Der Schatzgraeber, produced in Frankfurt in 1918 and 1920 respectively.
These works were followed by Irrelohe, given in Cologne in 1924 under
Klemperer, to be damned by the most influential critics, and by the opera Christophorus,
which was never staged, owing to opposition from the National Socialists, whose
influence was increasing. Der Singende Teufel was mounted at the
Staatsoper Unter den Linden in 1928 under Kleiber, but failed to impress the
public, while Der Schmied von Gent, completed in 1932, had the briefest
of runs at the Deutsches Opernhaus in Berlin, two months before Adolf Hitler
became Chancellor of Germany.
Schreker's reputation as a composer of
opera was to rest largely on Der ferne Klang, Die Gezeichneten and
Der Schatzgraeber, and this largely among his contemporaries. His fame,
in fact, came to an end with the decline of the Weimar Republic and with the
prohibition of performances of his works, in common with those of other Jewish
composers, during the period of the Third Reich. It is only in recent years
that more general interest in his music has been rekindled.
Schreker has a claim to our attention, of
course, as a teacher. His pupils included composers of the stature of Ernst
Krenek and Alois Haba, while Berg, who prepared the vocal score of Der ferne
Klang, an opera that won Schoenberg's approbation, was strongly influenced
by some of the techniques used by Schreker. As a composer he must seem in many
ways characteristic of the period in which he flourished, a late romantic,
whose style sorted equally ill with the mood of the Neue Sachlichkeit
proposed by Hindemith, the world of Brecht and Kurt Weill and with the
conservative tastes and Aryan cultural policies of the new regime.
The Vorspiel zu einer grossen Oper
was written in 1933 as an Overture to the proposed opera Memnon, which
was never written. The work is in effect a tone-poem based on the ancient
legend of Memnon, son of the Dawn and later ruler of Ethiopia, whose statue was
identified by the Romans with that of the Pharaoh Amenophis, a figure that provided
miraculous music of its own with the change of temperature as dawn broke.
Schreker makes use of a large orchestra, and exotic melodic contours and
instrumental colouring to suit his ancient Egyptian subject.
The Romantic Suite is music of the
more confident decade at the beginning of the century. Completed in 1902, the
year in which his first opera, Die Flammen, was given a concert
performance in Vienna, the Suite, which includes the effective
prize-winning Intermezzo for strings as the third of its four movements, is an
assured work, in the idiom of its own time, handled with clarity and assurance.
The Suite opens with an expansive and monumental Idylle, which includes
elements of intense drama in a more tranquil context, and closes with a dance
movement that seems at moments to have the stature of a symphonic finale. Both
works included in the present recording remain unpublished, except for the
Intermezzo, which appeared as Opus 8.
NOe Tonkuenstler Orchestra
The NOe Tonkuenstler Orchestra was re-established
in 1945, taking the name of the ensemble that existed from 1900 until the 1930s
under conductors of the greatest distinction. The orchestra is based in Vienna
and with its 100 players is one of the four large symphony orchestras of
Austria. It is maintained primarily by the province of Lower Austria
(Nieder-Oesterreich) and has the task of providing music both in Vienna and in
the province as a whole.
The orchestra has a wide repertoire,
ranging from the Baroque to the present day, and has a special interest in
contemporary music, being the only Austrian orchestra to be given honorary
membership of the Austrian Society of Contemporary Music. At the same time the
orchestra has provided a platform for young conductors who have gone on to make
distinguished careers for themselves. These include Zubin Mehta and Christoph
von Dohnanyi.
Uwe Mund
The conductor Uwe Mund was born in Vienna
in 1941. He gave his first concert as a pianist at the age of fourteen and two
years later began his studies as a conductor and composer. He entered the
University of Vienna in 1959, taking courses in Musicology and German Studies,
with work in conducting at the Music Academy under Hans Swarowsky, composition
with Hanns Jelinek and Karl Schiske and piano with Hans Petermandl. At the age
of twenty he graduated with distinction and was appointed conductor of the
Vienna Boys Choir, which he accompanied on two year-long tours of Europe and
America. He conducted also the Hofmusikkapelle, with the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra.
In 1963 Uwe Mund was appointed
solo-repetiteur at the Vienna State Opera under Herbert von Karajan and
Assistant Conductor of the Vienna Singverein. His subsequent career took him to
positions of Principal Conductor in the State Theatres at Kiel and Frankfurt-am-Main
and in 1977 to that of Music Director at Gel senkirchen. At present, he is
Music Director of the Gran Teatro del Liceld in Barcelona, Spain.
Uwe Mund has appeared as a guest
conductor at home and abroad, including engagements with the Hamburg State
Opera, the Berlin German Opera, the Mannheim National Theatre, the opera-houses
of Munich and Frankfurt and elsewhere. Abroad he has appeared with the San
Francisco Opera, in Lisbon, Warsaw, Copenhagen, Brussels, Stockholm, Barcelona,
Paris and Venice.