Opening Gala Concerts

Symphony No. 29 in A Major, K. 201
by W. A. Mozart
 

I. Allegro moderato
II. Andante
III. Menuetto, Trio
IV. Allegro con spirito

  • Approximately one third of Mozart’s total symphonic output was generated in just two years between 1772–1774. After that, between the summer of 1774 and the spring of 1778, Mozart turned away from symphonic writing because other forms of instrumental compositions received his interest. One of the most interesting and polished symphonies emanating from fertile two-year period was Symphony No. 29, K. 201.

    On every count, Symphony No. 29 is a fine specimen of gallant writing: well bred, charming, polite and faithful to the Viennese classical model. Its light-hearted charm and elegance intends a work which is truly meant to entertain and delight. For this purpose, Mozart chose to score the work modestly. Aside from the basic string component, only a pair of oboes and pair of horns are required. The economy of means in no way limits or impedes its symphonic character.

    The first movement, allegro moderato, begins softly introducing the first main theme immediately. The tune is catchy, marked by an octave drop and pulsing repeated notes. That opening idea rises sequentially by step, as if making certain that we do not miss the point. Horns and oboes later join with an expanded repetition. A lyrical second theme is sung by the violins. The very small development (approximately thirty measures) follows before a standard, literal recapitulation with a coda finishes the movement.

    An elegant Andante concerns itself with a delicate theme spun by muted violins. Edward Downs commented, “It is full of eighteenth century clichés and turns that were used a hundred times before and after by other composers, but here they are so spontaneous and lovely that each phrase bears repeating and repeating. And still the movement seems too short.” The form is tri-partite with the opening theme returning in the last part with increased violin embroidery.

    The third movement is a minuet. However, Mozart now moves to a slightly more aggressive style than polite convention would have expected. Neal Zaslaw has astutely characterized the music as more symphonic than dancelike.

    The fourth movement recalls the first theme of the first movement with its distinctive octave-drop profile. Another theme is typically galant, filled with decorative trills and grace notes. Mozart creates an informal fun-loving atmosphere (complete with hunting calls), spending more time on the development than in the first movement, thereby adding more weight to this final section. Overall, the music remains elegant and cheerful until the close.

    A symphonic silence after Symphony 29 led to a significant change when Mozart returned to the genre: a much broader canvas, scope and emotion would infuse the later works. Symphony No. 29 summarized a world and a style which was young and fresh, but not quite different from the maturity and content of Mozart’s future style.

    © Marianne Williams Tobias

Piano Concerto No. 2 in C minor, Op. 18
by Sergei Rachmaninoff

I. Moderato
II. Adagio sostenuto
III. Allegro scherzando

Sonya Kumiko Lee, piano

  • Sergei Rachmaninoff, Born 1873, Semyonovo, Russia - Died 1943, Beverly Hills, California.

    January 1900, Moscow. The gaunt 24-year-old Sergei Rachmaninoff lies on a couch, repeating a mantra: “You will begin to write your concerto. You will work with the greatest of ease. The concerto will be of excellent quality.”

    Rewind three years, to the chaotic premiere of Rachmaninoff’s First Symphony. The orchestra was scrappy, the conductor drunk, the critics savage. Rachmaninoff felt “a paralyzing apathy. Half my days were spent on a couch, sighing over my ruined life.”

    Today, he might be diagnosed with clinical depression. Rachmaninoff wrote nothing for three years, but continued to tour as a concert pianist. After a successful London performance, he found himself promising a new piano concerto. “A second and better one.”

    Rachmaninoff wasn’t confident he could deliver. Friends recommended a psychiatrist who specialized in hypnotherapy and the repetition of positive mantras. Rachmaninoff responded well to these sessions, and was able to move forward with the new work.

    The Second Piano Concerto breathes with the air of Rachmaninoff’s childhood. The concerto opens with evocations of the deep bells of the orthodox church. The orchestra answers with a slow, step-wise chant melody.

    In the slow movement we might feel the cooling breeze of Rachmaninoff’s beloved family residence, Ivanovka. “This steppe was like an infinite sea where the waters are actually boundless fields of wheat, rye, oats, stretching from horizon to horizon.”

    At Ivanovka, he found happiness, motivation. “The smell of the Earth, mowed rows and blossoms. I could work—and work hard. Every Russian feels strong ties to the soil. Perhaps it comes from an instinctive need for solitude.”

    The finale, despite its minor mode, brims with the crackle of electricity. The premiere of this concerto ushered in Rachmaninoff’s most productive period. In the next fifteen years, he would write many of his most beloved works.

    © Tim Munro

Meet our soloist Sonya Kumiko Lee

Sonya Kumiko Lee has performed as a soloist and chamber musician at renowned concert halls throughout the U.S. and abroad, including Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in NYC, Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln Center, The Wheeler Opera House in Aspen, Colorado, Create Center Hall in Osaka, Japan, and the Salle des Colonnes in Fontainebleau, France, among others. Some favorite highlights include a chamber music performance at the Bing Theater at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) which was broadcast live on KUSC, Ms. Lee’s first classical music video release featuring “The Banshee” by Henry Cowell, and a collaboration with new media artist, Steven Fragale, in the first live augmented reality and virtual reality painting performance at the Colly Soleri Music Center in Arizona. Ms. Lee’s affinity for rock music led to collaborations with Rivers Cuomo, the brilliant lead singer of the alternative rock band, Weezer. Ms. Lee’s performances with Mr. Cuomo have aired on Fresh Air with Terry Gross on NPR, Sirius Satellite Radio, I Heart Radio for Clear Channel, on Weezer’s album “Hurley”, and DVD release, “Not Alone: Rivers Cuomo and Friends.” 

Ms. Lee was born in Tokyo, Japan where she received her first piano at 9 months old - a red plastic piano, with rainbow-colored keys. Since then, Ms. Lee moved to Orange County, California where she began formal piano lessons, upgraded to a proper piano with all 88 keys, then headed to NYC to study at The Juilliard School where she studied with pianists Emanuel Ax and Oxana Yablonskaya. When not practicing for a performance or teaching her wonderful pupils, Ms. Lee enjoys spending time with her two German Shepherd dogs, hosting dinner parties, and watching soccer legend Lionel Messi work his magic on the pitch!

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