Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791) Serenade in D Major, K. 320 (Posthorn Serenade) Notturno in D Major for four orchestras, K. 286 Wolfgang Amadeus...
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 - 1791)
Serenade in D Major, K. 320 (Posthorn
Serenade)
Notturno in D Major for four orchestras,
K. 286
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in
Salzburg in 1756, the son of a court musician, Leopold Mozart, author in the
same year of an important book on violin-playing and later Vice-Kapellmeister
to the ruling Archbishop of Salzburg, in whose service he spent his entire
career. Leopold Mozart was quick to perceive the exceptional musical gifts of
his son and saw it as his god-given duty to devote himself to fostering them,
providing him with sound musical training and a good general education.
Mozart spent much of his childhood
travelling to the major musical centres of Europe, where he amazed those who
heard him by his musical precocity, performing at the keyboard with his elder
sister, Nannerl, the only other surviving child of his father's marriage.
Journeys to Italy involved commissions for opera, but the death of the old
Archbishop and succession of a much less sympathetic prelate in 1772 curtailed
travel, while adolescence in Salzburg brought its own dissatisfactions. Mozart
thought he deserved something better, an opinion in which his father heartily
concurred.
In an effort to find a more congenial
position, Mozart left Salzburg in 1777, spending time at Mannheim, where he
made friends with some of the musicians employed in what was then one of the
most famous orchestras in Europe, and moving thereafter to the original goal of
his journey, Paris. France, however, proved disappointing, and by the beginning
of 1779 he was back again in Salzburg, reinstated in the service of the
Archbishop, but chafing under the restrictions of his position and the lack of
wider opportunity.
In the later months of 1780 Mozart was
permitted to travel to Munich for the preparation of a new opera, Idomeneo,
commissioned through his Mannheim friends by the Elector of Bavaria, who now
held court there. From Munich, after successful performances of the opera in
January 1781, Mozart was summoned by his patron to Vienna, where his position
in the household of the Archbishop seemed to deny him the manifold
opportunities of a brilliant career that Vienna appeared to offer. A quarrel
with his patron resulted in ignominious dismissal and a final career of ten
years in Vienna which brought initial success. Mozart established himself as a
composer of opera, at first for the new German opera and then for the Italian
opera to which the Emperor had been compelled to return, with Le nozze di
Figaro in 1786 and Don Giovanni in 1787, the year of his father's death. He
organised subscription concerts, at many of which he appeared as soloist in new
piano concertos of his composition, and attracted many pupils. His marriage in
1782 to an impecunious cousin of the future composer Carl Maria von Weber
brought its own problems and he was frequently in financial difficulty in his
last years, although there were signs of a change of fortune in the great
popularity of his last German opera, Die Zauberflote, which was playing in a
suburban theatre at the time of his sudden death on 5th December 1791.
During the course of his career Mozart
found many demands for music of a lighter kind, suitable entertainment for his
listeners at some social gathering. His only official appointment at the court
of the Emperor Joseph II had been, nominally at least, to provide such music,
as Johann Strauss did nearly a century later. The so-called Posthorn Serenade,
K. 320, was completed on 3rd August 1779 in Salzburg and seems to have been intended
as Finalmusik to mark the end of the academic year at the University. It was
the custom for students to perform before the Prince Archbishop, at his summer
residence at the Schloss Mirabell, returning, to the accompaniment of a march,
to the college buildings to repeat the performance for their professors. The
posthorn was, therefore, a particularly appropriate instrument to mark the
departure of the students from the University, their studies now ended, its
sound associated always, as in Bach's keyboard Capriccio on his brother's
journey, with the departure of the coach.
The Serenade is scored for pairs of
oboes, bassoons, horns, trumpets and drums, a pair of flutes and a flautino
(here a piccolo), posthorn and strings. It opens with a slow introduction from
which post horn and flutes are excluded, proceeding to a livelier Allegro con
spirito in sonata form, its second, gentler subject given at first to the
strings of the orchestra. The first of the Minuets, with its A Major Trio,
leads to a movement marked Concertante, opened by the strings and bassoons, to
which solo wind instruments are added, re-appearing towards the end of the
movement in a brief cadenza.
The flutes are first used in the Rondeau,
in which trumpets and drums are silent, as they are in the following D Minor
Andantino, which is also without flutes. The Minuet is again scored for
trumpets and drums, with a first Trio for strings and piccolo and a second Trio
that introduces the limited notes of the posthorn. The Finale returns to the
orchestra of normal festive convention, without flutes, but strengthened by
trumpets and drums, a postscript to the posthorn's brief moment of passing
glory.
The Notturno for four orchestras, K. 286,
has no precise date, but has been attributed by some to December 1776 or
January 1777, and written, perhaps, for carnival in Salzburg. It is, in any
case, clearly incomplete, consisting of only three movements, the last of them
a Minuet, to which a later Trio was added. The four identical orchestras, the second,
third and fourth having the functions of an echo, consist of a pair of horns
and strings. The first movement embarks at once on the provision of diminishing
echoes, as the repetitions of the opening phrase become even more fragmentary,
the first echo unable to reproduce more than a few bars of one of the more
extended declarations of the first orchestra. The same procedure is followed in
the Allegretto grazioso and to some extent in the Minuet, with its rival pairs
of horns following close one group on the other, while the Trio appears in the
surviving source, a copy once in the possession of Mozart's biographer Otto
Jahn, scored only for four string parts, without apparent added echo.
Hans Gansch
Hans Gansch was born at Kirnberg in Lower
Austria in 1953 and studied the trumpet at the Bruckner Conservatory in Linz,
graduating with distinction in 1976, after a period of two years already spent
as first trumpet in the Linz Bruckner Orchestra. He followed this with similar
positions in the Austrian Radio Symphony Orchestra and at the Vienna Staatsoper
and since 1985 has played first trumpet in the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
In addition to a career as a soloist, Hans Gansch has appeared in various
ensembles, including Prisma, Kontrapunkte, Okulus and the Pro Brass Ensemble.
Capella Istropolitana
The Capella Istropolitana was founded in
1983 by members of the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, at first as a chamber
orchestra and then as an orchestra large enough to tackle the standard
classical repertoire. Based in Bratislava, its name drawn from the ancient name
still preserved in the Academia Istropolitana, the historic university
established in the Slovak and one-time Hungarian capital by Matthias Corvinus,
the orchestra works principally in the recording studio. Recordings by the
orchestra on the Naxos label include The Best of Baroque Music, Bach's
Brandenburg Concertos, fifteen each of Mozart's and Haydn's symphonies as well
as works by Handel, Vivaldi and Telemann.