Anne-Sophie Mutter describes Mozart as “the composer I have grown up
with, who was always there waiting for me at every juncture of my
career”; and she quotes with approval Tchaikovsky’s description of
Mozart’s music as “filled with unapproachable, divine beauty”. For this
latest instalment of her Mozart project, conceived to mark the 250th
anniversary of the composer’s birth, she has chosen the three finest
works among his half-dozen completed trios for violin, cello and piano.
In these, he developed the medium beyond its original conception as an
accompanied keyboard sonata, giving the cello and, especially, the
violin a much greater degree of independence, and so putting the latter
on what Ms. Mutter calls “a level of equality” with the piano. She adds:
“This is Mozart writing for pure enjoyment – his own included – in the
best sense of the word.”
There is a hint that Mozart might have partaken of that enjoyment
as a player in the postscript of a letter he wrote to his friend and
fellow-Freemason Michael Puchberg in June 1788, around the time he
completed the E major Trio, K.542: “When are we to have a little musical
party at your house again? I have composed a new trio!” But his relish
for private music-making during his later years in Vienna must have been
clouded by his recurring financial problems. The same letter to
Puchberg also contains a plea for a loan to be repaid over the next year
or two, and for an immediate advance to help him out of a temporary
difficulty. These three piano trios were presumably composed with the
primary intention of improving Mozart’s long-term financial situation,
since he sold them to his regular Viennese publisher Artaria: they were
issued in November 1788 as his op. 15.
In fact, this set was completed at the same time as Mozart was
composing his last three symphonies, nos. 39 to 41, which may also have
been written with one eye on the possibility of publication. And, with
the trios as with the symphonies, Mozart seems to have gone out of his
way to create a triptych of pieces with strongly defined and
differentiated characters – something which he ensured not least by his
choice of keys.
The first of the three, completed well before the others in
November 1786, is in B flat major – a key which seems to have been
something of a favourite of Mozart’s, and one which usually conveys a
sense of robust well-being. An oddity of Mozart’s use of it is the
number of sonata-form first movements in B flat in which the first and
second subjects are closely related, but a brand new theme is introduced
at the start of the development section – as happens here, with the
initial idea in sweet parallel thirds dominating the opening exposition
section, and a new lyrical melody on the violin at the double-bar. The
slow movement, in the warm, solid key of E flat major, is in triple
time; its recurring main theme begins with an upbeat of three quavers
(eighth-notes), and so do the themes of the subsidiary episodes, which
makes possible some neat overlapping between sections and, later,
between individual phrases. The finale has a main theme in gavotte time
with two crotchet (quarter-note) upbeats; as Alfred Einstein pointed out
in his study of the composer, this movement begins “like the rondo of a
concerto, as if with a solo passage, piano, answered by a tutti
passage, forte, but without any sacrifice of the finely wrought detail
of chamber music”.
The key of the second trio, E major, is rare in the classical
period and has something ethereal about it, as if its distance from more
common tonalities removes the music from everyday reality. In the
opening movement – in a smoothly flowing triple time, like the first
Allegro of the Symphony no. 39 in E flat which Mozart also wrote in June
1788 – this feeling of remoteness is pointed up by an unexpected
modulation towards the end of the exposition, from B major to the more
down-to-earth G major; Mozart repeats this exactly in the
recapitulation, from E to C, so that we can again enjoy the surprise,
and appreciate the ingenuity with which he works his way back to his
tonal starting-point. The delicate central movement, in a 2/4 version of
gavotte time, is in a limpid A major, with a middle section in A minor
which includes a haunting series of key-changes anticipating Schubert’s
poetic use of modulation. The rondo finale, with its jaunty violin
triplets and brilliant piano passage-work, makes a more determined
attempt at jollity than the other two movements; but even here the
violin’s C sharp minor melody in the central episode strikes a note of
tender seriousness which is never wholly dispelled.
Mozart entered the last of the three trios in his catalogue of his
works in July 1788 – less than a month before his last symphony, the
so-called “Jupiter”, which is in the same open, serious, ceremonial key
of C major. The first movement of the Trio indeed shows some affinities
with that of the Symphony, in its strong opening gesture, followed by a
gentle answer, and in the restlessness of its development section. The
slow movement, like that of the Symphony, is an Andante cantabile in F
major and in 3/4 time; its serene flow is merely ruffled by patches of
lightly touched-in demisemiquavers (thirty-second-notes), but is
disturbed for a moment by the sternly dramatic octaves after the
half-way double-bar. The last movement, rather than adopting the sonata
form and fugal texture of the “Jupiter” finale, is a rondo in dancing
6/8 time – though it is still closely worked in the manner of the
Symphony, with the arpeggio figure of the main theme passed round all
three members of the ensemble almost to the end.
Anthony Burton
Salve Enrique,
ResponderEliminarottima musica quella di oggi!! e ottima idea quella di proporre anche i video!!!
Il blog è già un ottimo punto di riferimento!! Buona vita a te!!!!
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ResponderEliminarBuenas tardes, puedes volver a subirlo? Muchas gracias.
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