Bohuslav Martinu (1890-1959)
Trio for flute, cello and piano
Trio for flute, violin and piano
Promenades for flute, violin and
harpsichord
Madrigal Sonata for flute,
violin and piano
The Czech
composer Bohuslav Martinu was born in 1890 at Policka in Bohemia in a bell-tower, where his father, a shoe-maker by
trade, was employed as watchman. In his childhood he learned the violin from a
local tailor and made a local reputation for himself, giving his first public
concert in his home-town in 1905. At the same time he concentrated attention on
composition, although without proper tuition and lacking even the necessary
manuscript-paper for the purpose. In 1906 he became a violin student at the
Prague Conservatory, but four years later, after relegation for one year to the
Organ School, he was expelled.
His principal interest, in fact, continued to
centre on composition, and he pursued this aim during the war, which he spent
as a teacher in Policka. In 1918 he joined the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra as
a violinist and his ballet Istar, completed in 1922, was performed in
1924. There had been a brief period of instruction in composition from Josef Suk
at the Conservatory, soon abandoned, and in 1923, assisted by a scholarship, he
moved to Paris to become a pupil
of, Albert Roussel.
In the following years Martinu's music began to
gain a hearing, particularly through Talich in Czechoslovakia, Paul Sacher and
Ernest Ansermet in Switzerland, Henry Wood in England, Munch in France and Koussevitzky in
the United
States.
By 1931 he had established himself well enough to marry a young dressmaker,
Charlotte Quennehen, although he never earned enough to allow even reasonable
comfort. The first performance of his Concerto Grosso planned by Talich
in 1938 was postponed with the invasion of Czechoslovakia that year and in
June 1940 he and his wife hurriedly fled from Paris, four days before the German
armies marched into the city. With considerable difficulty they made their way
to Portugal and thence to
Bermuda, reaching New York at the end of March 1941. In the United States Martinu
eventually received commissions from the Koussevitzky Foundation, for which he
wrote his First Symphony. This was followed by further symphonies and
concertos, including a violin concerto commissioned by Mischa Elman, while in
1943 his Memorial Stanzas, dedicated to Albert Einstein, was played by
the famous scientist with the pianist Robert Casadesus. After the war he
planned to return to Prague, where he had been offered the position of professor of
composition at the Conservatory, but was prevented from doing so by the
accession to power of the Communist Party. In 1948 he became professor of
composition at Princeton University, returning to Europe in 1953. He lived in Nice until
1955, when he moved to Philadelphia to teach at the Curtis Institute and the
following year returned to Europe to teach at the American Academy in Rome. After a period in
Nice, he spent his final years in Switzerland, where he died of cancer in
1959.
Martinu was an enormously prolific composer, who
seemed often enough careless of the fate of what he had written. He tended to
avoid revision of his compositions and in consequence the vast quantity of
music he wrote is of uneven quality and varying style, although he came, in the
1930s, to make increasing use of Czech thematic material and to be identified
with his native country, from which he remained an exile. Nevertheless there
were influences to be absorbed in Paris during the seventeen years he spent there, and
much of this is evident in the trios for flute, string instrument and piano or
harpsichord.
Martinu wrote his Trio for flute, cello and
piano in 1944 and it belongs, therefore, to his period of exile in America. It opens
vigorously, transparent in texture, with much use initially made of the notes
of the descending scale. The cello introduces a new thematic element,
sequentially developed before the return of the opening theme, leading to an
exciting conclusion. The second movement, marked Adagio, is introduced by
the piano, later to be joined by the flute, with the plucked notes of the cello
in accompaniment. Flute and cello then lead forward into music of strong
feeling, in which the piano joins, before subsiding into tranquillity. The
flute provides the introductory Andante with which the third movement
begins. Before leading into a very lively finale, which brings its own moments
of lyrical relaxation of tension, before the return of the opening scherzando.
The Trio for flute, violin and piano was
written in 1937, while Martinu was still in Paris. Politically this was a period
of particular disturbance, not least in view of the predicament in which Czechoslovakia was involved. It is
broadly neo-classical in form and texture, with a lively first movement. The piano
introduces a secondary theme in contrast, but the prevailing mood is that of
the opening. There follows an Adagio with interwoven melodic strands
from the three instruments. Something of the mood of the first movement returns
with the third movement Allegretto, a scherzo with a trio section
dominated by the flute, before the violin takes up the thread. The trio ends
with a movement marked Moderato that, as from time to time with earlier
movements, momentarily suggests Prokofiev, only to turn to an overtly romantic
flute episode, the serenity of which is broken by the twentieth century
counterpoint of the piano in which flute and violin soon join.
Martinu wrote his Promenades in 1939. The
choice of harpsichord, with flute and violin, is in accordance with the
neo-classical spirit of the period. The first energetic movement is followed by
a gentle flute aria, in which the violin joins in duet. The third of the Promenades,
marked scherzando, is capricious in humour and is followed by a
final Poco allegro with a conclusion of increased rapidity.
The Madrigalovli Sonata was written in
1942, during Martinu's first year in America. The opening Poco allegro is
lively enough, marked by syncopations that contribute to the character of the
music, followed by a second movement Moderato. Here the flute, with
vestigial accompaniment, provides the opening melodic interest, followed by the
interplay of flute, violin and piano. This leads to a conclusion of initial
vigour, subsiding into a gentler mood with the return of the flute melody,
before the final idiosyncratic syncopation.