Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
March for the Royal Society of Musicians (1791)
With the death of his patron Prince Nikolaus Esterházy in February 1790, Haydn was freed from his increasingly onerous duties as Kapellmeister. The Prince’s successor, Prince Anton Esterházy, shared none of his father’s enthusiasm for music. He disbanded both the orchestra and choir, and granted Haydn a comfortable pension. Financially secure, and at the height of his creative powers, Haydn accepted an unexpected invitation to visit London from the impresario Johann Peter Salomon. Haydn was to receive £300 for a new opera, £300 for six new symphonies, a further £200 for their copyright, £200 for twenty other works and a guarantee of at least £200 from a benefit concert. When Mozart asked Haydn how at his advanced age (fifty-six!) he could travel to England speaking no language but German, Haydn replied, “but my language is understood everywhere.” Haydn left with Salomon almost immediately, and arrived in London on New Years Day 1791. Haydn’s visit – the first of three - was an unqualified success.
Haydn’s first London concert took place on 11 March 1791, in the Hanover Square Rooms. Haydn himself directed from the harpsichord, while Salomon led the orchestra. “Never, perhaps, was there a richer musical treat”, enthused the Morning Chronicle. “It is not wonderful that to souls capable of being touched by music, Haydn should be an object of homage and even idolatry; for like our own Shakespeare, he moves and governs the passions at his will.”
Soon after, Haydn was invited to the annual dinner of the Royal Society of Musicians. For the occasion, he composed a march for orchestra, the autograph of which is still preserved by the society. This tuneful work began life as a short piece for wind instruments - specifically, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, and a now-obsolete woodwind, the serpent - and timpani. Its original title was March for the Prince of Wales. For this occasion, Haydn arranged it for full orchestra, adding two flutes and strings.
The Royal Society for Musicians, whose current patron is Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, is Britain’s oldest musical charity. When it was founded, in 1738, as the “Fund for Decay’d Musicians”, 228 members signed its Declaration of Trust, including Arne, Boyce, Greene, Pepusch, Edward Purcell (son of Henry), Roseingrave, Sammartini, and, most valuably, Handel, who left £1,000 to the Society in his will. From the outset, dinners or 'Anniversary Festivals' were held, which often included performances of specially-written Marches.
© Stephen Strugnell
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)
Violin Concerto No 5 in A major, K 219 'Turkish' (1775)
Allegro aperto
Adagio
Tempo di Minuetto – Allegro – Tempo di Minuetto
Mozart’s father Leopold was the author of one of the most celebrated violin tutors of his day; so it is not surprising that when the son began to show a precocious aptitude for music, he should have taken up the violin – at the age of six, we are told, and without any formal teaching – as well as the piano. The instrument remained important to him in his youth, and indeed he played it regularly in the Salzburg court orchestra and on tours. It was only when he left the Salzburg court for Vienna in 1781, and so escaped from the direct influence of his father, that he concentrated his efforts as a public performer on the piano, reserving the violin (or more often the viola) for private musical parties.
Not surprisingly, all Mozart’s five concertos for solo violin date from his early years: the first probably from April 1773, the rest from the period between June and December 1775 – the months leading up to his twentieth birthday. It is known that some of the concertos were played by the Italian-born leader of the Salzburg orchestra, Antonio Brunetti; and there is a reference in one of Leopold Mozart’s letters to a concerto written for another Salzburg violinist, Johann Anton Kolb. But there is also evidence that Mozart himself played at least one of them in public; and it is easy to imagine that they reflect his own technique and personality as a violinist – not least in the many opportunities they present for improvised transitions as well as full-scale cadenzas.
Of the five concertos, the last – dated 20 December 1775 – is the most mature, and the most ambitious, despite having no more than the standard Salzburg orchestration of strings, two oboes and two horns. The first movement has the unusual marking of Allegro aperto, suggesting openness or straightforwardness; its most unusual feature is the soaring six-bar Adagio with which the solo violin makes its initial entry. The same tempo marking and mood, and the same concentration on the lyrical upper register of the solo instrument, mark the E major slow movement. The finale is a rondo in minuet time, which was a familiar enough way of ending a mid-eighteenth-century concerto; less expected is the appearance of a minor-key central episode in 2/4 time and in the currently fashionable “Turkish” style, with the usual noisy percussion impersonated by the cellos and basses. This movement also boasts one of Mozart’s wittiest endings.
© Anthony Burton
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Serenade No 1 in D major, Op 11 (1858)
Allegro molto
Scherzo: Allegro non troppo
Adagio non troppo
Menuet I & II
Scherzo: Allegro
Rondo: Allegro
Young Brahms originally intended the first of his two orchestral serenades to be a nonet for wind and strings in the vein of Beethoven’s Septet or Schubert’s Octet - which may explain why, even in its more symphonic final version, its fourth and fifth movements seem to retain their chamber music affinities, with prominent, often pungent, wind parts.
Yet the effect of the work can also seem curiously suggestive of a Mahler symphony, or at least the sort of symphony Mahler might have written if he had been a 25-year-old genius living in Detmold in the year 1858. The bucolic drone of its opening bars provides a foretaste of the start of Mahler’s Symphony No 1 (in the same key), and the jovial horn theme has a distinctively Mahlerish stamp. Pastoral the serenade certainly is. No other big-scale work by Brahms, other than the Second Symphony in the same key, speaks quite so refreshingly of the open air. Why he eventually chose to inflate such intimate music into an orchestral work was perhaps typical of the uncertainty from which he persistently suffered. His Piano Concerto No 1, completed in the same year, had begun as a symphony before being transformed into the work we know. But the serenade, so long as it is played by a chamber orchestra rather than something weightier, retains much of its original lightness of touch, while gaining the extra richness of string tone that justified Brahms’s revision.
What gives the work its considerable length is not only its quantity of movements but also the large-scale symphonic processes required by the first movement, slow movement, and finale, as well as the sheer size of some of the themes. In contrast, the second movement, a shadowy minor-key scherzo prophetic of the equivalent movement in the Second Piano Concerto, is more concise, as are the pair of tiny, comical minuets and the second scherzo, clearly a joke inspired by Beethoven, and all the better for coming from a composer as supposedly serious as Brahms.
The larger movements, on the other hand, give the work the Brahmsian ballast it needs. The way the introductory drone bass keeps harmonically shifting ground as the horn theme moves towards the movement's first climax defines not only the symphonic scale of the music but also its al fresco serenade-like nature. The shape of the themes, their way of melting from four beats to three beats in the bar, is unmistakably Brahmsian, even at this early stage in his career.
But if the first movement is large, the adagio, with its gently rocking rhythm, is even larger. It is laid out in grandly unshortened sonata-form, with a rich array of themes, a full-scale development section, recapitulation and coda, as if it were a symphonic first movement played in slow motion.
Sir Donald Tovey, Edinburgh’s distinguished musical essayist, famously devoted one and a half pages of a programme note to this adagio, claiming in the process that the music owed much of its quality of tone to the brook in Beethoven’s Pastoral symphony, which here "flows into a wide river, passing through a remote key into a peaceful lake."
The rondo finale, though considerably shorter, is nevertheless far from perfunctory. The remarkable length of the springy main theme and its rollicking offshoots immediately suggests that the music will last just as long as it needs to, and so it does. The coda, said Tovey, is "triumphant," though to call it radiant and exhilarating might be even more apt.
© Conrad Wilson
If you like your music melodious and big-hearted, with more than a hint of folk influence, Brahms’ Serenades are for you. They include some of his most immediately appealing music. Fischer deftly complements the First Serenade with works by the two composers who strongly influenced Brahms at the time of its writing.
Sir Charles Mackerras conducts the SCO in Brahms' Serenade No 1 in D major Op 11. The recording also features the composer's Serenade No 2 in A major, Op 16.

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