Joseph Martin Kraus (1756 -1792) Olympie Overture Symphonies in E flat major, C major and C minor Musical life in Stockholm took a new turn in the...
Joseph Martin Kraus (1756 -1792)
Olympie Overture
Symphonies in E flat major, C major and C minor
Musical life in Stockholm took a new turn
in the seventeenth century with the arrival from Germany of the Düben family.
At this time serious music was confined to the church and it was not until 1731
that public concerts began, the earlier of these organized by Johan Helmich
Roman, the first Swedish composer of importance at the beginning of a national
musical tradition. His Drottningholm Music of 1744, composed for a royal
wedding, still has an important place in Swedish musical repertoire.
The fine arts came fully into their own,
however, only with the reign of Gustavus III, from 1771 to 1792, when cultural
life was reformed and revitalised. In the first year of his reign he founded
the Academy of Music, which was charged with the handling of musical education
and the promotion of further interest in the art. A few years later he
established the first music theatre, the Royal Swedish Opera. The king's main
personal interest was in the theatre, where he wanted every1hing performed in
Swedish by Swedish artists. This soon proved impossible, owing to the
suddenness of the change and the shortage of available artists, leading to the
engagement of a number of artists from abroad, who were soon to make a
significant contribution to Swedish cultural life. The result was a fruitful
mixture of French, Italian and German inspiration.
The most important of the immigrant
composers were Johann Gottlieb Naumann, Georg Joseph Vogler (the Abbe Vogler),
Johann Christoph Hæffner and Joseph Martin Kraus. There is no doubt that Kraus
was the most talented of these. Born in Miltenberg am Main in 1756, he had been
educated from the age of twelve in Mannheim, then a city of many musical
innovations. After his earlier schooling, he followed his parents' wishes by
studying law in Mainz, Erfurt and finally Gottingen, in this last finding a
rich breeding-ground for his interests in literature and music. During his
period at the university he composed symphonies, sacred music and an opera and
joined the circle of writers known as the Gottinger Hainbund, coming
into contact with the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress) movement of the
1770s and making his first attempts at writing fiction. It was in Gottingen
that he heard from Swedish students of the state of fine arts in Stockholm and
was advised to go there to try to secure a position at the opera-house.
It was thus in 1778 that Kraus, at the
age of 22, arrived in Stockholm. His first years were not easy and more than
once he considered going home, but after his opera Proserpina, with a
libretto by the poet Johan Henrik Kellgren, had been given a concert
performance at Ulriksdal Castle things rapidly improved and in 1781 he was
appointed conductor at the Royal Swedish Opera. This position brought the
privilege of studying abroad for five years, good proof of the royal interest
in the maintenance of high artistic standards. Kraus gladly accepted the
opportunity, travelling to Vienna, where he met Christoph Willibald von Gluck,
and, on a visit to Esterhaza, Joseph Haydn, two composers who were to exert a
strong influence over his work. A number of Kraus's best works were composed
abroad. Some were published in Vienna and Paris, with those issued in Paris
often bearing the names of better known composers, a common trick of publishers
at the time, in the interest of increased sales. Some of these are thought to
have been written for the famous Paris Concerts spirituels.
In Stockholm again in 1781 Kraus met
difficulties through the intrigues of some fellow- composers. The following
year, however, he was appointed principal conductor at the Royal Swedish Opera
and director of the educational part of the Academy of Music His own work as a
composer enjoyed only partial success. Of some fifteen symphonies few, if any,
were ever performed in Sweden, apart from that written for the funeral of
Gustavus III, the Symphonie funèbre. Abroad, however, he fared better.
His foremost operatic project, Aeneas i Carthago (Aeneas in Carthage),
with a text by Kellgren, took on gigantic proportions over a period of ten
years and was not performed until seven years alter the composer's death.
Kraus's career was cruelly short. He died
in December 1792 at the age of 36 and was soon forgotten, the Romantic period
having little interest in or understanding of the Gustavians. Only in the
twentieth century has Kraus been accorded the importance he so richly deserves.
That he is Sweden's foremost composer between Roman and Berwald is now
generally accepted.
In addition to orchestral and chamber
music, operas and other vocal works, Kraus also wrote incidental music for the
theatre. In January 1792 Voltaire's tragedy Olympie was staged at the
Royal Dramatic theatre, in a translation by Kellgren. For this production Kraus
wrote an overture, a march and a number of interludes. The first of these,
following the tradition of Lully, took the form of a French ouverture, with
a solemn adagio introduction in dotted rhythm, an impatiently hurrying allegro
and an epilogue related to the beginning. The overture is fully
characteristic of its composer and easily stands comparison with similar works
by Gluck and Mozart.
Twelve symphonies by Kraus have been
preserved. Many more are mentioned in letters and notes by Kraus and others,
but it is difficult to ascertain which of these have disappeared completely or
which have perhaps been assimilated into works we know in some other form.
Almost invariably his symphonies consist of three movements, without the
traditional minuet. It is possible that Kraus found that its dance character
did not suit the dignified style of his writing.
The three symphonies here included are
all thought to have been composed in the first half of the 1780s, the Symphony
in C major in Stockholm in 1781, and the other two during Kraus's
leave of absence from his duties at the opera-house. The Symphony in C minor,
the most frequently played of his compositions, goes back to an earlier Symphony
in C sharp minor, a key very rare in this context. Both versions
have been preserved and the later version, apart from its change to a more
manageable key, displays a considerable increase in refinement and a profounder
treatment of the material. It was once assumed that the work had its first
performance under Haydn during Kraus's visit to Esterhaza in 1783, but the
symphony then played may well have been the Symphony in D major, later
published under Haydn's name. In any case, Haydn liked the music very much and
many years later is said to have remarked to a common friend, the Swedish
diplomat Fredrik Silfverstolpe: "The symphony he wrote here in Vienna
especially for me will be regarded as a masterpiece for centuries to come;
believe me, there are few people who can compose something like that." The
dark, passionate mood of the Symphony in C minor is reminiscent of
Haydn's Sturm und Drang period around 1770, comparable with minor-key
symphonies such as Nos 44, 45 and 49. Stylistically it is also very close to
Gluck, with his overture for Iphigenia in Aulis, an opera which had been
staged in Stockholm in the year of Kraus's arrival there Gluck is said to have
commented on Kraus: "That man has great style."
To call Kraus the Swedish Mozart, as has
occasionally been done, has little relevance, apart from the fact that both
composers were born in the same year and that Kraus died just one year after
Mozart and nine months after the assassination of his patron, Gustavus III.
Translation 1997 Lars Johansson
Swedish Chamber Orchestra
The Swedish Chamber Orchestra (Svenska
Kammarorkestern) was established on 16th May 1995 by merging a string
orchestra, the Örebro Kammarorkester (Örebro Chamber Orchestra) with a wind
ensemble, the Örebro Kammarblåsare (Örebro Wind Ensemble). Örebro was the first
city in Sweden to set up a full-time, professional chamber orchestra, in 1962.
The ensemble so formed has enjoyed a very active career, with concert-tours at
home and abroad, broadcasts, recordings and television appearances. The wind
ensemble was formed in 1992 under the direction of Gordon Hunt, principal
oboist with the Philharmonia Orchestra in London. During its first season as
the Swedish Chamber Orchestra, the orchestra had a busy schedule of
subscription concerts at Örebro Konserthus and numerous recordings. This
activity has continued, with Thomas Dausgaard assuming the position of chief
conductor in autumn 1997.
Petter Sundkvist
Petter Sundkvist was born in 1964 at
Boliden and now holds an enviable position in Swedish musical life as one of
its most sought-after conductors. He first studied to become a cello and piano
teacher at Piteå Music College, going on to prepare himself as a conductor with
Kjell Ingebretsen and Jorma Panula in Stockholm. He followed the completion of
his studies in 1991 by a period at the Eolvos Institute in Hungary. His
subsequent career has brought a busy series of varied engagements in
opera-houses throughout Sweden and with major Scandinavian orchestras, with
appointment in 1996 as associate conductor of the Swedish Radio Symphony
Orchestra. For Naxos he has undertaken an extensive programme of recording of
Swedish music, including choral works by Lars-Erik Larsson and Hilding
Rosenberg and music for chamber orchestra by Kurt Atterberg and Gunnar de
Frumerie. His first international Naxos release of Stenhammar's Symphony No.
2 and Excelsior! (Naxos 8550888) has won general praise, both at
home and in the international press.