Vladivostok, Primorsky Stage, Great Hall

Brahms

Soloist: Pavel Milyukov (violin)
The Mariinsky Orchestra of the Primorsky Stage
Conductor: Pavel Smelkov


PERFORMERS:

Soloist: Pavel Milyukov (violin)
The Mariinsky Orchestra of the Primorsky Stage
Conductor: Pavel Smelkov

PROGRAMME:

Johannes Brahms (1833–1897)
Violin Concerto in D major, op. 77 (1878)
Symphony No. 2

About the Concert

In the summer of 1877 Johannes Brahms wrote his Second Symphony in D Major in the picturesque setting of Pörtschach am Wörthersee. Free of the need to repeat Beethoven’s concept – Brahms had already overcome this in his First Symphony which was given the soubriquet of “Beethoven’s Tenth Symphony” – the composer created one of his brightest works. The Second Symphony is imbued with a hymn to life and a love of nature, and its music breathes power and health. In it Felix von Weingartner saw “a Dutch landscape at sunset”, while Ivan Sollertinsky saw “a brilliant pastorale surrounded by the poetry of old Vienna.” Hans von Bülow, underlining the successive nature of Brahms’ work, called his Second Symphony “Schubert’s last symphony”.

A delighted reception met the first performance of the symphony in Vienna on 30 December 1877 under the baton of Hans Richter: the third movement – a delightful Ländler – was given an encore at the insistence of the audience. After the excited pulsation and the anxious and gloomy feel of the First Symphony, the Second appears to be a sunny idyll; after the Beethoven-like pathétique of the First, the spirit of Schubert flows forth in the Second and a kind of sung symphonism reigns. The rhythm of Brahms’ beloved waltz genre runs through symphony, giving it, in the words of Eduard Hanslick, “something of the serenade”. But the most surprising thing of all is the description (albeit joking) of his new symphony that the composer himself gave in a letter to one of his admirers: “… not a symphony, just a Sinfonia”, thus indicating a return to the initial meaning of the term (sinfonia – accord), to the beginnings of the genre.

Iosif Raiskin

Johannes Brahms' Violin Concerto in D Major was completed in summer 1878 and first performed on the first day of 1879 at Leipzig's Gewandhaus; the orchestra was conducted by Brahms himself, and the solo performed by Joseph Joachim, to whom the piece is also dedicated. The history of Brahms' friendship with Joachim began in 1853 at the house of Robert Schumann, where the as yet almost unknown twenty-year-old composer met the brilliant violinist, a mere two years older than himself but already known to many outstanding musicians. With his stunning violin technique, Joachim was not too transfixed by demonstrative virtuosity, in his play placing greater emphasis on exposing the inner nature of the work, its lyrical qualities.
Brahms, who was himself sceptical of outward glitter, could not but be drawn by such a feature of the violinist's nature. The Violin Concerto is one of the most vivid pieces of evidence of their collaboration and one of the most complex works in the violin repertoire. Johannes Brahms, who was a great pianist but had a somewhat cloudy concept of the particular nature of violin technique, nonetheless created a work that presented a series of new, for the time, and highly complicated performance problems. The violinist faces the most exacting demands regarding harmony playing, the ability to cover large intervals, confidence in moving to a higher register. Regarding all matters of violin technique, Brahms turned to Joachim, but, interestingly, almost never followed him. To all the violinist's objections and requests to remove the greatest difficulties from the violin part, the composer responded with insignificant changes essentially regarding the finish of the details. Subsequently, Joachim performed Brahms' Violin Concerto often, and in this he was followed by other renowned violinists of the age in turning to this masterpiece. Just like Beethoven's Violin Concerto, which greatly influenced Brahms, with the soloist and orchestra appearing as equal partners. Despite the immense difficulties of the solo part, the audience never has the sensation that virtuosity is there especially for show. Brahms' Violin Concerto is filled with stormy pathétique and beautiful lyricism with a light shading of melancholy. The work, typically for the concerto genre, comprises three movements: the well-developed Allegro, intense in symphonic feeling, the dreamy, radiant Adagio and the energetically forceful final rondo. The principal theme of the finale draws to mind boisterous Hungarian song, a kind of hint at Joachim's Hungarian blood and, at the same time, a tribute to the use of Hungarian gypsy melodies. At the very end of the life-affirming, triumphant finale, Brahms introduces several contemplative, tempered accords - like a unique and special signature of the composer, inwardly always alone and at odds with the rowdy celebration of life.

Yegor Kovalevsky

Age category 6+

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