Musicon / Musical education / Cadenzas

Cadenzas


Posted on June 5th, 2009 | Mail a friend

Compositions belonging to the category of chamber music, and concertos for solo instruments with orchestral accompaniment, all have individual characteristics conditioned on the expressive capacity of the apparatus. The modern piano is capable of asserting itself against a full orchestra, and concertos have been written for it in which it is treated as an orchestral integer rather than a solo instrument. In the older conception, the orchestra, though it frequently assumed the privilege of introducing the subject-matter, played a subordinate part to the solo instrument in its development. In violin as well as piano concertos special opportunity is given to the player to exploit his skill and display the solo instrument free from structural restrictions in the cadenza introduced shortly before the close of the first, last, or both movements.

Cadenzas are a relic of a time when the art of improvisation was more generally practised than it is now, and when performers were conceded to have rights beyond the printed page. Solely for their display, it became customary for composers to indicate by a hold a place where the performer might indulge in a flourish of his own. There is a tradition that Mozart once remarked: “Wherever I smear that thing,” indicating a hold, “you can do what you please;” the rule is, however, that the only privilege which the cadenza opens to the player is that of improvising on material drawn from the subjects already developed, and since, also as a rule, composers are generally more eloquent in the treatment of their own ideas than performers, it is seldom that a cadenza contributes to the enjoyment afforded by a work, except to the lovers of technique for technique’s sake.

I never knew an artist to make a more sensible remark than did M. Ysaye, when on the eve of a memorably beautiful performance of Beethoven’s violin concerto, he said: “If I were permitted to consult my own wishes I would put my violin under my arm when I reach the fermate and say: ‘Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the cadenza. It is presumptuous in any musician to think that he can have anything to say after Beethoven has finished. With your permission we will consider my cadenza played.’” That Beethoven may himself have had a thought of the same nature is a fair inference from the circumstance that he refused to leave the cadenza in his E-flat piano concerto to the mercy of the virtuosos but wrote it himself.

From: H. Krehbiel’s, How to Listen to Music; excerpts, edited by Musicon

MUSICON
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks
Tags: Beethoven, chamber music, improvisation, Mozart, Musical education, orchestral accompaniment, piano concertos, solo instruments, violin concerto, ysaye


Related (automatic selection)

Leave a Reply