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Publication Date
2-8-2008
Year of Release
2008
Note(s)
Stephen Lawson, horn
assisted by
Yesim Dikener, piano
Program Notes
Leopold Mozart is principally known as the father of Wolfgang Mozart. As the father of a prodigy, he toured young Wolfgang and his sister, Nannerl to most of the courts of Europe performing piano recitals. This unflattering portrayal of a possibly exploitive father misses the point that he was also their teacher and mentor and must have been a fine musician in his own generation. Barry Tuckwell describes, "The provenance of this work [Concerto in D] is uncertain. The only reference to it is in the Thematic Catalogue of the composer (Denkmal der Tonkunst, Vol. 9,2) in Bayern, preserved in Mathingen, dated 1755.
Concerto in D by Leopold Mozart owes its construction to Baroque practices, using binary forms in each movement and an extremely high tessitura for the horn player, known as "clarino". Horn construction was changing from the hunting horns of waldhorn, trompe-de-chasse or cor-de-chasse to the "inventionshorn". The hunting horns were built at a fixed pitch. If you wanted a horn in a different key, one had to build a new instrument. Music for these instruments was popular due to nobles and patrons who loved the hunt. By allowing the horn into the orchestra, they combined their love of music and hunting. It was also seen as man's effort at controlling nature as the horn player is relegated to those notes that the horn can produce.
During 1750-1755, the invention, in the inventionshorn with a tuning slide and crooks and couplers system was perfected. Anton Hempel (1705-1771) developed and codified a system of using one's hand in the bell to produce additional pitches in a mid-range. As the time of castrati singers passed, so too did the clarino style of playing brass instruments.
Wolfgang Mozart composed many of his works for ·horn for Ignaz Leutgeb (1745-1811), including four concertos-, the Quintet for horn and strings and Concert Rondo, K. 371. Though much is noted about Mozart's flippant attitude towards Leutgeb's efforts, he was known to be a fine horn player in Salzburg. Leutgeb owned a cheese shop and helped Wolfgang financially and was repaid with new music.
During the era of hand-horn performance practice, the horn was extremely popular. After the piano and violin, the horn ranked third among all instruments for solo repertoire. It was part of the training of a composer to write for horn, as the horn could not produce all tones equally as a piano or stringed instrument.
Valves were invented around 1815. However, Parisian orchestras and the Paris Conservatory still used hand-horn technique until 1910. During this nearly 100 year span, various types of valves were developed including pistons, rotors and the Viennese ''pumpen-valve". Several theories have been expounded on the slow transition to universal valve acceptance.
Little is known about C. D. Lorenz. Probably a horn player, Lorenz composed quite a few pieces for horn and piano. This fantasy is based on melodies from I Puritani (The Puritans) by Bellini. Fantasie, Op 13 demonstrates a style of valve horn playing similar to trumpet compositions by H. L. Clarke and Arbans. The prolific scale passages, lower range and tessitura point to a -different understanding of virtuoso possibilities.
Happy Blues by Zsolt Nagy brings us to the modern era, as it was written in 2000. It is intended as a fun work and allows the performer many opportunities to demonstrate modern techniques. Use of the hand and performing of chords date to the time of Mozart, and yet are exploited to new levels. After a brief introduction, there are several choruses of 12 bar blues and a coda.
Note
First Presbyterian Church, Huntington, WV
Disciplines
Arts and Humanities | Fine Arts | Music | Music Performance
Recommended Citation
Lawson, Stephen, "Marshall University Music Department and First Presbyterian Church, present, "MUsic Alive", featuring, Stephen Lawson, horn, assisted by, Yesim Dikener, piano" (2008). All Performances. 826.
https://mds.marshall.edu/music_perf/826