Franz Berwald (1796-1868)
Piano Trios Volume 2
In the programme notes to Berwald's Piano Trios Nos. l, 2
and 3 (released on Marco Polo 8.223170), it was pointed out how 19th-century
Sweden failed to recognize in him its most original and greatest symphonist.
When his early works, including a Symphony in A Major from 1820 that survives
now only in part, were first performed, the critics faulted the young composer
for seeking mere originality and effect. They complained about his excessive
and seemingly wayward modulations, melodic paucity, painful dissonance and a
general impression of chaos--eccentricities that must have appeared all the
more startling against the suffocating conventionality of Swedish musical life.
A few critics admitted that he might have talent and urged him to follow the
rules of composition. Many years later, in 1858, Franz Liszt advised, "You
possess true originality but will have no success in your lifetime. Still, you
must carry on in this way." Fortunately, that is precisely what Berwald
had done all along.
In a burst of creativity between 1841 and 1845 Berwald
composed the four symphonies and five symphonic poems on which his reputation
rests. Thereafter he turned to chamber music, encouraged in part by his social
activities in Stockholm from 1850 onward. In general the chamber music is more
chromatic than the orchestral works, and that may be attributed to Spohr's
influence. From Beethoven Berwald acquired a predilection for short motifs and
insistent rhythmic patterns. His harmonic language is fresh and exciting; its
newness lies not in the invention of things hitherto unheard but in a
fascinating approach to existing resources. The area of structure is where
Berwald made his boldest strides. As early as 1828 a quest for unity led him to
enclose the scherzo within the slow movement of his Septet in B-flat Major, and
he perfected the procedure in the Sinfonie singulière. The String Quartet in
E-flat Major of 1849 represents the fullest attempt at integration. There the
scherzo is encapsulated within the slow movement, which in turn is contained
within the allegro, producing a unified structure consisting of an introduction
and five connected sections.
The period of the mature chamber music, roughly from 1845 to
1858, produced two string quartets, two piano quintets, two duos, and five
completed piano trios plus two fragments. As an experienced violinist and
violist Berwald wrote idiomatically for the strings, and it is not surprising
that the two string quartets of 1849 impress with their mastery. Strangely, the
bulk of his chamber music consists of piano trios. Given his lack of pianistic
expertise, no wonder his first attempt is fraught with the pitfalls of piano-and-string
balance, a problem that has bedeviled most composers after Beethoven's and
Schubert's time.
The Trio in C Major, which remained in manuscript until
1981, was presumably composed in 1845, the year in which Berwald produced his
masterpiece, the Sinfonie singulière, and the great Symphony in E-flat Major.
The first movement, in fairly regular sonata form, begins promisingly with an
attractive Beethovenian theme in C major, followed by a second subject group in
the expected dominant key. That consists of a languid, chromatic melody, a
vigorous transitional passage and a descending motif with an inborn tendency to
modulate. The development is straightforward with the transitional passage
playing an unexpectedly large role. The first subject is not heard again after
the development, and the recapitulation begins directly with the second subject
in the tonic key. Berwald's proclivity for encasing the scherzo within the slow
movement occurs again in the C major trio. The Adagio molto begins with a severe
melody, relieved midway by a fleeting, songlike episode. A bridge passage with
gossamer effects in the piano leads to a triple-time scherzo. The rhythmic
momentum continues into a contrapuntal trio section. After the return of the
scherzo proper, a truncated and modified reprise of the adagio closes the
movement. The finale, Presto, follows without pause. It is the finest part of
the trio for all its endearing quirkiness. For 141 bars Berwald throws out a
succession of what appear to be introductory ideas. One is a fascinating
ostinato with a full two-octave span. Together these seemingly introductory
ideas form the first section of a ternary structure. The contrasting section is
a whimsical march in E-flat major. Following the repeat of the opening material,
condensed by about one third, the march returns briefly in C major to conclude
the trio. Despite its many felicities, the trio has obvious flaws, most
noticeably in the thick and awkward piano writing, which probably explains
Berwald's apparent dissatisfaction and his withholding it from publication. But
more about that later.
The fragment in E-flat major, dated 15 October 1849, is an
entire first movement, complete but for a final cadence. It is the largest
first movement of any Berwald trio, and its abandonment is cause for puzzlement
and profound regret. It is lyrical, expansive and seamlessly constructed. There
is a well controlled flow of ideas, and the first subject undergoes extensive
development even before the exceptionally beautiful second theme makes its
appearance. A sense of structural unity reigns over this beautifully shaped
music, and furthermore, Berwald has solved his problems with the piano. The
keyboard writing is expressive, dramatically integrated and well balanced with
the strings. Whatever the reason for not completing this fine work, Berwald
salvaged the 13-bar introduction as the beginning of an entirely new trio.
Completed in 1849 and published as Trio No. 1 in E-flat Major, it is generally
regarded as his finest.
In the absence of firm dating, the assumption is that around
1850 Berwald attempted to revise the C major trio of 1845. This fragmentary
revision begins with the string parts in mid air, and the piano part shows a
relationship to the gossamer transition between the 1845 adagio and scherzo.
How and where the 1850 fragment would have connected to the 1845 allegro is
conjectural. It is certain that Berwald was in search of greater unity, because
the new material is in C major and not in the dominant G major of the original;
there is a precedent for just such a tonal scheme in the E-flat major string
quartet. After 25 bars of adagio the C major fragment goes into a triple-time
scherzo that is a marked improvement over the one it was meant to replace. It
is fleet and assured, and it lacks the rather academic counterpoint of the
earlier scherzo. An interesting detail is the introduction of a marchlike
passage that occurs twice, the second time leading into 14 bars of the finale,
identical to the 1845 version but for a simplification of the piano part.
Having completed the Trio No. 2 in F Minor and the Trio No.
3 in D Minor during 1851, Berwald returned once more around 1853 to the
unfinished business of the C major trio. Instead of further revision, he
composed in effect a new work based in part on the earlier material. Although
brought to completion, it was only published posthumously in 1896 as Trio No.
4. It comprises three sections corresponding to allegro, slow movement (without
scherzo) and finale, notated as one continuous span. The form is free, hinting
at but not conforming to classical design. Replacing the 1845 sonata-allegro,
the opening section begins with a new theme derived in part from an ascending
motif in the 1845 finale. The intent is obviously to unify the new trio. A
descending nine-note motif, which signals transitions in this movement,
announces the second subject in the expected G major, then returns, followed by
a restatement of the second subject a tone higher. A third theme, broadly
lyrical and vaguely suggestive of Borodin, enters on the cello. There follows a
development of the first subject, after which the descending motif ushers in a
delicate piano solo that prefigures the slow movement. But first the third
theme returns, encapsulating a descending episode that derives from the second
subject group of the original 1845 allegro. Modulation to G major marks the
beginning of the adagio, a lovely movement composed of several elements, one
taken from the 1845 trio, where it occurs immediately before the gossamer
transition to the scherzo. (Interestingly, this same motif can be heard twice
in the E-flat major fragment.) Another familiar idea is the "octaves
ostinato" from the 1845 finale, employed here as a unifying device. The
finale is the only movement that survives in recognizable form from the first
version. Much of the first section material is similar to the original, but one
idea has been replaced by the marchlike motif from the discarded 1850 scherzo.
The central E-flat march is considerably and skillfully elaborated, but the
shape of the finale is basically unchanged. The initial section returns,
modified and shortened, and the march reappears briefly in the tonic key before
a grandly resounding conclusion. As much as one can admire Berwald's skill in
reworking his material into the highly polished trio of 1853, that in no way
diminishes the joy to be found in the original trio's raw and wonderfully
quirky freshness. Each has its claim to legitimacy.
Kalman Drafi
Kalman Drafi was born in 1955 and started to play the piano
at the age of four. Six years later he entered the Béla Bartók Conservatory in
Budapest and at the age of fourteen became a student at the Ferenc Liszt Music
Academy in the same city. He spent two years as a pupil of Bella Davidova at
the Tchaikovsky Conservatory in Moscow and in 1976 won the major award in the
Liszt-Bartók Piano Competition. Since 1977 he has been a member of the teaching
staff of the Liszt Academy.
Jozsef Modrian
Jozsef Modrian was born in Budapest in 1962 and completed
his violin studies at the Ferenc Liszt Academy in 1985. He is concertmaster of
the Hungarian State Orchestra and leader of the corresponding chamber
orchestra.
György Kertész
Born in 1963, György Kertész studied music in Budapest, graduating
at the Ferenc Liszt Academy. In 1986 he won the Budapest David Popper Cello
Competition and enjoys an active career, particularly as a chamber music
player, with a number of recordings to his credit in Hungary and abroad.