Home | Contact Us | Site Map

Home
About Us
Our Musicians
Support the TSO
News
Donate Now !!
SYMPHONY SET
TSO 2008-2009 Season
A Magical Evening

 

Program Notes for "A Magical Evening" October 27, 2007

“Harry’s Wondrous World” from Harry Potter Suite by John Williams (b. 8 February 1932). Composed in Los Angeles in 2001.

“Ritual Fire Dance” from El Amor Brujo by Manuel De Falla (b. 23 November 1876; d. 12 November 1946). Composed in Madrid in 1914-15.

“Magic Fire Music” from Die Walküre by Richard Wagner (b. 22 May 1813; d. 17 February 1881). Composed in Zurich in 1852-4.

Danse Macabre, op. 40 by Camille Saint-Saëns (b. 9 October 1835; d. 16 December 1921). Composed in Paris in 1874.

The Sorcerer’s Apprentice by Paul Dukas (b. 1 October 1865; d. 17 May 1935). Composed in Paris in 1897.

Firebird Suite by Igor Stravinsky (b. 18 June 1882; d. 6 April 1971) Composed in Paris in 1910.

Symphonie Fantastique op. 14 by Hector Berlioz (b. 11 December 1803; d. 11 March 1869). Composed in Paris in 1830.

For those who love music, and that surely is the majority of us, music is magic: sounds combined in interesting and sometimes unexpected ways to create something quite inexplicable. In this sense, the theme of Magic for a concert program is a proverbial “no brainer.” After all, what work doesn’t fit into this category? On the other hand some works are naturals. In fact, there are a great many works that specifically deal with the idea of magic or the occult. Of course literature, drama, folklore, myth, and poetry are filled with examples of stories that incorporate elements of magic, sorcery, the fantastic and the grotesque, all of which audiences have found compelling for centuries right down to our own time. From the “sympathetic magic” of prehistoric cave people to J. K. Rowling’s epic tale of the young wizard Harry Potter, people have been fascinated with the knowledge and power of the invisible world, whether real or fictional. In this same context the ideas of magic, the occult, and religion find common ground, even if it is sometimes an uneasy neighborhood. The works on this program span the continuum from ethnic folklore to contemporary fiction, all addressing different aspects of the magical and mysterious.

The theme of sorcery, wizards and apprenticeship are taken up in the seven-part series of books chronicling the young life of Harry Potter. The music to the first three films based on the books has been composed by the leading film music composer of his generation, John Williams. The selection “Harry’s Wondrous World” derives from the first film, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (2001), and presents a number of familiar themes that conjure images of the magical atmosphere of the famous school of wizardry, Hogwarts, with its gothic atmosphere, moveable staircases, animated portraits, messenger owls, fabulous feasts, floating ghosts and candles, and amiable giants.

Another important basis for musical tales of the fantastic is the folklore of various regions of the world. In Manuel de Falla’s ballet, El Amor Brujo (Love, the Magician), gypsy, or Romani, folklore serves as the basis for the story. The scenario revolves around the folkloristic belief in the persistence of the spirit of the dead in the world of the living. In this version, a woman, Candelas, is haunted by the wicked spirit of her jealous lover who has died. She attempts to rid herself of this spirit through various purification rituals, one of which is depicted in the now famous “Ritual Fire Dance.” Quivering, trilling strings evoke the image of a stirring flame as the oboe followed by the strings play the first of two main themes. The second theme is broad and noble presented in the French horns. The two melodies intertwine, linked by the rolling trill of the flame. Loud, repeated chords at the end of the movement signal the conclusion of the dance and Candelas’ ultimately frustrated attempt at exorcising the spirit.

Before there were movies to write music for, there was opera. Opera has had something of a fascination with the world of magic and the supernatural. The music dramas of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Niebelungen contain many examples of magic and the fantastic. A brilliant example of Wagner’s “magical” music comes from the second of the four works in the Ring cycle, Die Walküre (The Valkyries). At the end of the work Wotan, leader of the gods, punishes his daughter, Brünhilde (a Valkyrie), for her disobedience. She is condemned to become a mortal and will lie asleep until the first man that finds her, claims her. She begs for Wotan to surround her by a wall of fire that can only be penetrated by the greatest hero. Wotan agrees and after kissing Brünhilde and causing her to fall asleep, he invokes the fire spirit, Loge, who encircles the Valkyrie with flames.

Wagner, a significant influence on movie composer John Williams, is famous for his use of identifiable themes or leitmotifs, associated with particular characters or things in his operas. In the “Magic Fire Music,” ominous, descending brass chords signify Wotan’s spear followed by shimmering strings and harp representing Loge’s dancing flames. A theme in the winds symbolizes Brünhilde’s sleep, while the brass theme is a foreshadowing of the hero destined to awaken her, Siegfried, whose story is the subject of the third work in the tetralogy.

Camille Saint-Saëns, like so many European composers of his time, drew upon familiar folk traditions for some of his works. Most notably is the subject of what is probably his most well known orchestral work, Danse Macabre. The source of this programmatic work is an old superstition that tells how at midnight on Halloween, Death, through his violin playing, is empowered to call to life the dead who can then dance for him until the break of day. For this composition, Saint-Saëns uses the solo violin to represent death itself and his violin playing is made even more sinister through the use of scordatura, or irregular tuning of the violin. Here the highest string, normally E, is tuned to E-flat, creating an interval of a tritone between it and the next lower string. Medieval musicians considered the dissonant tritone to be “the devil’s interval.” Two main themes again dominate the movement, a kind of grotesque dance of quick rhythmic character and a more lugubrious, diabolical waltz idea. The texture builds throughout as presumably the number of dancing corpses grows until after reaching the height of their frenzied dance, the rooster (oboe) crows his warning that the Sun is about to rise.

The French composer, Paul Dukas, created a work that has become iconic in American culture, The Sorcerer’s Apprentice. Its appearance in the 1940 Walt Disney film Fantasia, starring Mickey Mouse as the besieged apprentice has made it familiar to audiences for generations. Dukas’ source for the story is a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe written 100 years before the music. Goethe’s poem is itself an adaptation of much older (2nd c. CE) poem by the Greek poet Lucian. The story tells of a young sorcerer, who in the absence of his master uses his limited powers to induce a broom to fetch water from a stream. When he tries to make the broom cease, he can’t recall the proper words and the broom continues, unrelenting. The apprentice decides to take an axe to the broom to make it stop, but to his horror the pieces each become new water bearers only compounding his dilemma. Finally the master returns using his greater powers to subdue the unruly broom.

Like de Falla’s ballet, El Amor Brujo, Stravinsky’s Firebird was also originally a ballet based on the folklore of the composer’s native land. In the case of Stravinsky, that land was Russia and the story centers on a heroic figure captivated by a magical bird that saves his life and ultimately bestows happiness upon him. The hero, a young prince named Ivan, finds himself in the land of an evil giant, Kashchei, the Deathless. There he sees the Firebird whose beauty entices Ivan to steal one of its feathers. He later meets a group of 13 maidens, one of whom he falls in with. The maidens are prisoners of Kashchei and when they return to him, Ivan follows, only to be captured himself. As he about to be turned to stone, he waves the magical feather and the Firebird appears and tells Ivan how to destroy Kashchei. For his score, Stravinsky drew upon the musical vocabulary of his famous teacher, Rimsky-Korsakov, to create brilliant and exotic orchestral color and rich, pungent harmonies. Though highly indebted to his master, the Firebird was the launching point for the career of one of the 20th-century’s most important and influential composers. Although the original Firebird premiered in 1910, Stravinsky arranged sections of the ballet into the Firebird Suite for concert performance in 1919.

The Symphonie Fantastique is certainly Hector Berlioz' most famous work. The complete title of the work is “Episode in the Life of an artist, Fantastic Symphony in Five Parts.” Berlioz conceived his Fantastic Symphony with an explicit program roughly based on his own obsessive and ill-fated infatuation with an Irish Shakespearean actress named Harriet Smithson. In the symphony's program, the young musician and the object of his obsessive love are generally recognized as Berlioz and Smithson. Though not explicitly “magical” the presence of witches and sorcerers suggests an occultish quality to the final two movements whose music is at turns grotesque, solemn, horrific, and exhilarating.

Part Four: March to the Scaffold-Having become certain that his love goes unrecognized, the artist poisons himself with opium. The dose of the narcotic, too weak to kill him, plunges him into a sleep accompanied by the most horrible visions. He dreams that he has killed the woman he had loved, that he is condemned, led to the scaffold, and that he is witnessing HIS OWN EXECUTION. The procession moves forward to the sounds of a march that is now somber and fierce, now brilliant and solemn…

Part Five: Dream of a Witches Sabbath-He sees himself at the Sabbath, in the midst of a frightful assembly of ghosts, sorcerers, monsters of every kind, all come together for his funeral. Strange noises, groans, outbursts of laughter, distant cries which other cries seem to answer. The beloved melody appears again … now it is no more than the tune of an ignoble dance, trivial and grotesque: it is she, come to join the Sabbath. ... A roar of joy at her arrival. ... She takes part in the devilish orgy.

©2007 Robert S. Katz, Ph.D.


 

 

 

 

© 2008 Tulsa Symphony Orchestra
111 E 1st Street Tulsa Union Depot Tulsa, OK 74103  phone 918.584.3645  fax 918.584.3603