Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Symphony No.3 in F Major, Op. 90 Serenade No.1 in D Major, Op. 11 Hans Richter, who conducted the first performance of Brahms's...
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Symphony No.3 in F Major, Op. 90
Serenade No.1 in D Major, Op. 11
Hans Richter, who conducted the first performance of Brahms's Third Symphony in Vienna in December,
1883, referred to the work as the composer's Eroica,
leading Eduard Hanslick to add that the First
Symphony might be considered the Appassionata
and the Second the Pastoral. The enemies of Brahms were
predictably hostile. Hugo Wolf, a fervent Wagnerian, was to claim that there
was more intelligence and emotion in a single cymbal stroke by Liszt than in
all the three symphonies of Brahms that had then appeared, while to Wagner and
his wife Cosima, Liszt's illegitimate daughter, Brahms was that rude, boorish
man with his mediocre music. Wagner himself did not live to hear the Third Symphony, but nothing would have
altered his resentment at comparisons between Brahms and the inimitable
Beethoven, whose rightful successor he considered himself to be.
In the summer of 1883 Brahms took rooms in the spa town of Wiesbaden,
perhaps to be near the young singer Hermine Spies, his Hermione without an '0',
whose musical abilities were to serve as inspiration for the Opus 96 and Opus
97 songs. At the age of fifty Brahms seemed a confirmed bachelor, but his
sister, at least, had heard rumours of an impending engagement with Hermine,
who had made her debut at Wiesbaden the previous year. The affair came to
nothing, although her Johannes Passion was to continue and Brahms himself was
deeply moved by her death in 1893.
The Third Symphony opens
with a brief figure played by the wind and this serves as a bass to the intense
emotion of the succeeding theme proposed immediately by the violins. A second
subject, in A major, is introduced by the clarinet, accompanied by a string
drone bass, offering a pastoral contrast to the grandeur of the first theme.
The opening motif reappears with particular poignancy played by the French horn
in the central development, which closes with a richness of counterpoint
typical of the composer. The C major slow movement allows clarinets and
bassoons to predominate in the statement of the principal theme, the same
instruments introducing a second theme, followed by oboe and French horn. A
moving cello theme in C minor starts the third movement, a world away from the
traditional lighthearted scherzo. There is a Trio section, its sombre
implications replaced by the return of the principal theme of the movement
played by the French horn. The last movement, in which much of the argument of
the symphony is concentrated, opens ominously, the mysterious initial activity
of bassoons and strings, sotto voce, leading to a great storm of sound in which
the composer shows all his power. The finale is massive in conception, ending
not with the defiance of a Beethoven but with a gentle recollection of the
first movement.
The Serenade in D major, Opus 11,
was written during the months Brahms spent at the court of Detmold, its period
of composition overlapping with that of the Serenade in A major. Like its
companion it was published in 1860, the year of its first performance in
Hanover, although it seems that it had at least been played through in Detmold
in its original form as an octet by players from the orchestra, led by the
violinist Karl Bargheer. Clara Schumann, an influential advocate of Brahms at
this early stage in his career, insisted that the Serenade should be played at
a benefit concert in Vienna in 1860, if she was to take part, and urged the two
Serenades on other influential conductors.
In six movements, largely following earlier tradition, the Serenade
owes something to Brahms's study of classical models. The surviving autograph
suggests that the work was conceived as a symphony-serenade, and in length, at
least, it is ambitious. It starts in a happy pastoral mood, to which a more
ominous strain is added, in the tones of Beethoven, before becoming
recognisably and unequivocally Brahms. The lilting first Scherzo, a contrast to
the substantial opening Allegro, touches a rustic mood in its trio section, and
is followed by a slow movement of classical contour, in which that most
characteristic of all instruments used by Brahms, the French horn, has its due
prominence - otherwise classical in its scoring, the Serenade calls for four
French horns rather than the two horns of the earlier period. The first Minuet
lightens the tranquil mood with a moment of peasant jollity, delicately scored,
before the intervention of a more poignant element, against the continuing
ostinato accompaniment. The French horn introduces the second Scherzo, with
more than a touch of Beethoven in pastoral mood. A final Rondo brings the
Serenade to an end.
BRT Philharmonic Orchestra, Brussels
The history of the BRT Philharmonic Orchestra, Brussels goes back to
the birth of the Belgian Radio in the 1930's. After the well-known musicologist
and promoter of contemporary music, Paul Collaer, had become head of the Music
Department of the Belgian Radio, the orchestra, under its conductor Franz
Andre, gained a world-wide reputation for its interpretations of the latest
compositions of Stravinsky, Berg, Bartok, Hindemith and other 20th century
composers. The orchestra gave the first European performance of Bartok's
Concerto for Orchestra in Paris and the first West European performance of the
Fourth Symphony by Shostakovich, and has, over the years, worked with many
leading conductors, from Pierre Boulez, Paul Hindemith and Darius Milhaud to
Lorin Maazel and Zubin Mehta.
In 1978 the Radio Symphony Orchestra was dissolved and both the Flemish
and the French Radio divisions set up their own symphony orchestras. The
Flemish network soon had a new orchestra, the BRT Philharmonic, with some 90
musicians and Fernand Terby became its principal conductor from 1978 to 1988.
Since 1988, Alexander Rahbari has been the principal conductor and musical
director of the new BRT Philharmonic Orchestra.
Alexander Rahbari
Alexander Rahbari was born in Iran in 1948 and was trained as a
conductor at the Vienna Music Academy as a pupil of von Einem, Swarowsky and
Österreicher. On his return to Iran he was appointed director of the Teheran
Conservatory of Music and took a leading position in the cultural development
of his country. In 1977 he moved to Europe, winning first prize in the Besançon
International Conductors' Competition and the Geneva silver medal. In 1979 he
was invited by Herbert von Karajan to conduct the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
and served as von Karajan's assistant in Salzburg. Rahbari's subsequent career
has been highly successful, with concerts throughout the world and engagements
in leading opera-houses. He is Principal Guest Conductor of the Czech
Philharmonic Orchestra and has conducted major orchestras throughout Europe, in
Japan and in Canada. Alexander Rahbari is now a citizen of Austria.