Viola Concerto | |
---|---|
by Jörg Widmann | |
Period | Contemporary |
Genre | Concerto |
Commissioned by | |
Composed | 2015 |
Dedication | Antoine Tamestit |
Published | 2017 Mainz : |
Publisher | Schott Music |
Recorded | 2018 |
Duration | 27:00[1] |
Movements | 1 |
Premiere | |
Date | 28 October 2015 |
Location | Philharmonie de Paris |
Conductor | Paavo Järvi |
Performers |
Jörg Widmann's Viola Concerto was composed in 2015 and premiered on 28 October 2015 with soloist Antoine Tamestit and the Orchestre de Paris under the direction of Paavo Järvi at Philharmonie de Paris.[1]
The original commission of the viola concerto by Tamestit dates back to the year 2008.[2] The concerto, dedicated to Tamestit and realized in 2015,[3] was finally commissioned by Orchestre de Paris, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra and Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra.[1]
In a performance of Hector Berlioz's Harold in Italy in May 2015 Tamestit was wandering through the orchestra while playing the viola solo part.[a][5] Widmann took up the idea.[6] Widmann and Tamestit[b] worked close together during the creation process of the concerto.[7][2] The unusual piece is tailored to Tamestit's technical and theatrical skills.[2][8]
The viola concerto of operatic approach[9] has a duration of about half an hour and is in a single movement.[5] At the beginning, the violist discovers his instrument through tapping and pizzicato.[c][7] The concerto becomes later more traditional with using the bow.[10] Starting near the harps and ending nearby the conductor,[11] the viola soloist takes seven positions on the stage[d] and becomes a partner or opponent to the bass flute, two harps, double basses, tuba and percussion.[4][6] At one point in the middle of the concerto the soloist screams.[13] The solo viola plays at the end a glissando and the viola's C string is tuned down to a B, matching the pitch of the double basses in the last few measures.[4]
Source:[1]
The instrumentation is light but bass-oriented.[14]
The world premiere was on 28 October 2015 in Paris, Philharmonie, followed by performances in Stockholm and Munich.[1]
As of 2022[update], the concerto was performed some 20 times.[5]
Music critic Andrew Clements of The Guardian described the viola concerto as a "substantial piece" with "outstanding virtuosity".[5] Mark S. Jordan (Seen and Heard International) wrote about a "theatrical tour de force".[10] Inge Kjemtrup (Strings magazine): "extraordinary".[2] Tamestit's biography at New York Philharmonic states, that Widmann's Viola Concerto is "among the most important works Tamestit has premiered"[15] Angela Kratschmer wrote in the Journal of the American Viola Society: "travel narrative for the twenty-first century" and "postmodern viola-as-actor".[16] Michael Klier from Bachtrack wrote: "This viola concerto has added something truly new to current concert practice." ("Der gegenwärtigen Konzertpraxis ist mit diesem Bratschenkonzert etwas wirklich Neues hinzugefügt worden.")[3]