SYMPHONIC SEASON 2025
Roberto Abbado conductor
Timothy Ridout viola
HINDEMITH | SCHUMANN
Timothy Ridout

PROGRAM
Paul Hindemith
Der Schwanendreher, concerto for viola and small orchestra over ancient folk songs
Robert Schumann
Symphony No. 2 in C major , op.61
PROGRAM
Paul Hindemith
Der Schwanendreher, concerto for viola and small orchestra over ancient folk songs
“An itinerant player, entering a gathering of merry people, makes these people hear melodies that he has collected elsewhere, both serious and facetious in nature; following his inventive genius as a musician, he preludes, embroiders and fantasizes over these themes, ending with a danceable piece.” This is the note placed at the head of Schwanendreher’s score, which literally means “he who spins swans,” perhaps an allegorical reference to the hurdy-gurdy player. First performed in Amsterdam on Nov. 14, 1935, with the composer himself as soloist, this Viola Concerto exhibits ancient folk melodies, in an anomalous instrumental ensemble, which reserves a position of absolute prominence for the viola, since the two sections of first and second violins are not contemplated, as are the other violas in the orchestra.
Robert Schumann
Symphony No. 2 in C major , op.61
“I wrote the second symphony,” are the composer’s words, “when I was still in great pain, and it seems to me that you should feel it when listening; it reflects the resistance of the spirit against my physical condition. The first movement is full of this struggle and its capricious and obstinate character.” Schumann’s four symphonies were born over a period of ten years: the First is written by the German composer in early 1841 in a happy period, shortly after his marriage to Clara Wieck; the Second takes shape between 1845 and 1846 in Dresden, when his psychic instability begins to manifest itself in an increasingly serious way; the Third, on the other hand, was composed in 1850 following the musician’s move to Düsseldorf to take over the leadership of the city’s orchestra; while the Fourth, made in its original version as early as 1841 immediately after the First, shelved because of its lack of success, was revised by the composer in 1851, five years before his death.
PROGRAM
Overture, “Le Carnaval Romain”
In 1844 Hector Berlioz, among the great fathers of French Romanticism and one of the greatest innovators in the symphonic field, wrote a concert piece in A major with an extensive solo part reserved for the English horn. Thus was born the Overture “Le Carnaval romain,” a brilliant piece of broad melodic generosity, full of themes from the opera Benvenuto Cellini, composed six years earlier. The themes of the opera used, in fact, are those related to the Roman carnival scenes from which the overture takes its title.
“Prèlude à l’après-midi d’un faune.”
The notes are released like sensual exhalations in “Prélude a l’après-midi d’un faune” (1892-94) Claude Debussy’s first great symphonic masterpiece, which is immediately presented with its “new breath” (Pierre Boulez’s definition) thanks to the flute’s enigmatic opening phrase, “so full of voluptuousness as to become anguished,” Vladimir Jankélévitch’s words.
PHILHARMONIC OF THE MUNICIPAL THEATER OF BOLOGNA
Nothing found.
This post is also available in: Italiano (Italian)