Turkish Delights!
"The
Compleat Composer” is how many folk regard
Mozart, and who am I to argue? He wrote
music in all forms, of all shapes and sizes,
and had both the talent and the fluency
to work miracle after miracle. It often
makes me wonder, what might he have written
if he’d got his sticky mitts on the rich
orchestral resources of the early Twentieth
Century? Not, I’m certain, anything
even remotely like Prokofiev’s Classical
Symphony!
Some
folk think that Mozart was able to write
so much in such a short career only because
classical structures furnished “ready-made”,
formulaic frameworks. That’d be plausible,
except that Mozart was one of the originators
of the “rulebook”. What’s more, although
sticking rigidly to the rules is a fast
track to high production, it’s also the
low road to mediocrity. Bending the rules
generates freshness and originality, and
takes time. Mozart took the high
road, and that’s one measure of his genius.
Both
these Mozart pieces touch on matters “Turkish”.
Musically, Mozart was in no way attempting
anything “authentic”: he was simply pandering
to a popular fad for the “exotic”. The farcical
plot of Die Entführung aus dem Serail
concerns an attempted elopement from a Turkish
palace, the cue for an overture replete
with breathlessly whirring tunes and “appropriate”
percussion. Ignore the latter, which is
easy enough in these days where new music
often has more exotic percussion than strings,
and what have we left? Well, an overture
in the “Italian style”: virtually identical,
frenetic outer sections framing a slow “trio”
in a perfectly poised ternary form. I reckon
that, if he’d put this in a symphony, Mozart
would’ve invented the Scherzo and Trio
years before Beethoven did!
Questions
of youth versus maturity didn’t arise for
Mozart’s five violin concertos: he wrote
the lot in 1775. In the Violin Concerto
No. 5, we get only as far as the end
of the first movement’s orchestral exposition
before Mozart springs his first surprise:
instead of immediately leading off an exposition
repeat the soloist enters, adagio, like
a tightrope walker defying the void. In
the slow movement, he confounds those who
expect variations to be neatly compartmented,
like a parade of shop windows. Instead he
works his long, multi-faceted theme to create
a feeling of something more like a leafy
lane. The finale is a rondo, but nowhere
near a “standard” rondo. Firstly, this is
the only movement without a full cadenza:
Mozart instead distributes the cadenza “role”,
as preludes to each return of the main subject.
Secondly, imagine the movement as a jewel-box.
You open it, and find inside both jewels
and a smaller jewel-box. Opening
that reveals a further array of jewels:
the famous “Turkish” episode is itself a
“mini-rondo”. Now, that’s magic!
Note
originally commissioned by the Vancouver
Symphony for a concert given on 15 November
2003. In the event, it wasn’t used because
the soloist changed his programme!
.
© Paul Serotsky
,
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