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Fujikura, Prokofiev, & Mozart

When

Friday, July 19 @ 7:30 pm - 9:00 pm EDT

Where

Studzinski Recital Hall
12 Campus Road S Brunswick, ME 04011

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Fujikura, Prokofiev, & Mozart

DAI FUJIKURA
Floating Fireflies

June Han, harp

 

SERGEI PROKOFIEV
Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 80

I. Andante assai
II. Allegro brusco
III. Andante
IV. Allegrissimo

Nelson Lee, violin • Pei-Shan Lee, piano

 

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART
Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K. 581, “Stadler”

I. Allegro
II. Larghetto
III. Menuetto — Trio I — Trio II
IV. Allegretto con variazioni

Stephen Williamson, clarinet • YooJin Jang, Meg Freivogel, violin • Liz Freivogel, viola • Denise Djokic, cello


DAI FUJIKURA‬
Floating Fireflies (2021)

Dai Fujikura has provided the following note to accompany‬ Floating Fireflies‬‭:‬

The harp has always been a mysterious instrument for me.‬ I knew the function of the instrument, but I always knew there‬ must be more than how the instrument works.‬

 

When I received a passionate email from the harpist Stef Van‬ Vynckt asking me to write a new harp piece, I was delighted. Also, another harpist, Mai Fukui, was happy to co-commission‬ the work with Stef; I felt that at last the long awaited time‬ had come for me to research the instrument.‬

 

It turned out to be more research into the harpists — the‬ musicians who decided to dedicate their lives to the‬ instrument — rather than research into the harp itself. Why‬ did they choose this instrument? Why do they become so‬ obsessed by it? What is so great about it?‬

 

I was composing this work during the pandemic, so I could‬ spend a long time with them remotely, trying out many‬ different things. It was more as if I was trying to get into the‬ harpists’ minds rather than just focusing on what is‬ technically possible on the harp.‬

 

After all these experiences with the two harpists, the music‬ material I came up with was something that appeared to float,‬ hovering without a particular direction. Or maybe there IS an‬ overall direction. Or maybe it is something between the two‬ states….‬

 

SERGEI PROKOFIEV‬
Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 80 (1946)‬

Having spent much of the interwar period in the United States‬ and Paris, by the time of the Great Depression Prokofiev‬ increasingly found work in the Soviet Union. The state, relatively‬ shielded from the economic freefall, took an active part in‬ funding cultural production. After a few years of shuttling‬ between Paris and Moscow, however, Prokofiev was made to‬ understand he could no longer have his cake and eat it. Either he‬ should return to the USSR and become an “official” composer, or‬ revoke the right to return to Russia altogether. With his wife and‬ sons, therefore, Prokofiev moved back to Moscow in 1935. For the first few years, he retained an “external passport” allowing him to‬ tour abroad; in 1938, he sent his passport to the authorities for a‬ bureaucratic formality, never to have it returned.‬

 

It was that same year, 1938, that Prokofiev began his First Violin‬ Sonata, alongside a large number of official projects — a work to‭ celebrate the 60th birthday of Stalin, a score and cantata for‭ Sergei Eistenstein’s‬‭ Alexander Nevsky‬‭, and an opera‬‭ project‬ Semyon Kotko‬‭, based on Valentin Kateyev’s novel,‬‭ I,‬‭ Son of‭ Working People‬‭. In contrast to these politically sanctioned‬‭ works,‭ Prokofiev’s Violin Sonata strikes a somber and searching tone, a‭ far cry from the brash confidence of the Socialist Realist‭ aesthetic doctrine made official under Stalin. Listen in particular‭ for the chilling passage at the end of the first movement where‭ the muted violin swirls in nimble runs around bell-like chords in‭ the piano, a passage Prokofiev described as “autumn evening‭ wind blowing across a neglected cemetery grave.” It is not hard to‬‭ imagine this sonata harboring some of the apprehension and‬ uncertitude the composer faced during these transitional years.‬

 

Feeling unable to complete the work in 1938, Prokofiev set it‬ aside, returning to it only after the War. By that time,‬ Prokofiev had secured his reputation as a reliably patriotic‬ composer: in 1943 he achieved the prestigious title of Honored‬ Artist of the Russian Soviet Republic, and in 1946 he was‬ consecrated with three Stalin Prizes (for his Fifth Symphony,‬ Eighth Piano Sonata, and the‬‭ Cinderella‬‭ ballet). It was violinist‬ David Oistrakh, a friend of Prokofiev’s, who induced the composer‭ to complete the sonata, premiering it later that year. Given the‭ sonata’s anxious and tormented character, it may seem surprising‭ that the work earned Prokofiev yet another Stalin Prize in 1947 — proof, perhaps, that as far as the regime was concerned,‭ Prokofiev’s solid track record counted for more than scrutiny of‭ his style. After Prokofiev died in 1953 — on the same day as Stalin‭ himself — Oistrakh chose to reprise the slow movements of the‭ Sonata at his funeral.‬‭

 

WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART‬
‭Clarinet Quintet in A Major, K. 581, “Stadler” (1789)‬

Mozart’s Clarinet Quintet exhibits the seemingly magical synergy‬ that can occur when a composer writes with an outstanding‭ instrumentalist in mind. In this case, it was the clarinetist and‭ basset hornist Anton Stadler, one of Mozart’s earliest musical‭ contacts following his arrival to Vienna in 1781. Over the years,‭ the two grew to be close comrades: both became Freemasons,‭ and even hatched plans to form their own secret society (called‭ Die Grotte, or “The Grotto”), although this never came to fruition.‭ Their friendship brought about a large number of works, including‭ a handful of Masonic compositions for basset horn, little‭ remembered today. Stadler’s lasting artistic legacy came through‭ his contributions to clarinet performance. At a time when the‭ clarinet was mostly heard as a component in a “harmonie” (a‭ wind ensemble used for light or ceremonial music), Stadler‭ distinguished himself as an exceptional soloist. As Mozart wrote‭ to his friend, “Never could I have imagined that a clarinet could‭ imitate the human voice as you did. Indeed, your instrument has‭ so soft and lovely a tone that nobody can resist it.”

‭Mozart made the most of Stadler’s skill. His so-called‬ “Kegelstatt” Trio, K. 498 for piano, clarinet and viola, composed in‬ 1786, was among the first chamber works composed for the‬ instrument. The publisher, aware of the peculiarity of the‬ configuration, indicated that the clarinet part could be performed‭ by a violinist instead. By the time Mozart composed the clarinet‭ quintet in 1789, there was no doubt: this was “Stadler’s Quintet,” and a new paradigm of clarinet performance was in place. Two‬ years after the quintet, Mozart followed up with another clarinet‭ masterpiece for Stadler: his concerto, K. 622‚ completed a few‭ weeks before his death.‭ While the quintet was composed originally for the “basset‬‭ clarinet,” a woodwind of Stadler’s invention combining his two‭ instruments of choice and featuring an extended lower register,‬‭ today it is typically performed using a standard clarinet in A.‬

 

Program Notes by Peter Asimov‬

Details

Date:
July 19
Time:
7:30 pm - 9:00 pm
Cost:
$49
Event Categories:
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Venue

Studzinski Recital Hall
12 Campus Road S
Brunswick, ME 04011
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