Tchaikovsky - Fantasy Overture "Romeo and Juliet"
“Oh, not
that old warhorse again!” I hear the cry. But, I wonder, what exactly
is a “warhorse”? The dictionary says it's “a veteran soldier or politician”,
or “a reliable but mediocre writer”. In music, “warhorses” are pieces whose
very popularity with the common public (that's us!) has severely diminished
their proper impact. In cosy complacency, we tend to lose sight of what
fine music they really are (unless, that is, they really aren't).
Several Tchaikovsky pieces fall into this at once enviable and unenviable
category. Romeo and Juliet is a classic example, so maybe we should
reconsider some of its finer points, to try to get ourselves back on the
edges of our seats.
Formally,
it's a very straightforward ternary form: Introduction-A-B-A'-B'-A''-Coda
(the ' and '' indicating progressive developments of the materials). The
sections are distinct episodes separated mostly by simple pauses or sustained
notes, and the [A] and [B] episodes seem to stick firmly with their own
separate materials. So far, fairly “hack”? However, to be fair, a symphony
this is not. This episodic segregation, in a work embracing one
of the most impressive musical interpretations of a literary work, purposefully
emphasises and underlines the basic dichotomy of Shakespeare's play: [A]
represents the feuding families, while [B] depicts the “star-cross'd lovers”.
Should
we question the received wisdom that the Introduction represents the saintly
Friar Lawrence? Apart from a vague odour of Russian Orthodoxy, there is
nothing to suggest the security of religious faith. Instead, the music
positively drips tense expectancy. If we listen carefully, aren't its materials
simply those of [A], slowed right down? So, isn't this really an impression
of the impending conflict? Then again, what about that coda, where the
tragic fate of the lovers is magically caught by a noble but doom-laden
transformation of [B] (a nice symmetry)? Why, I wonder, did Tchaikovsky
seemingly sabotage it with that fff drum-roll and parade of loud, staccato
chords? Doesn't it remind you of the similarly incongruous conclusion of
Mahler's Third?
Finally,
I suspect that there actually is a connection between the [A] and
[B] episodes. Romeo, after all, links the two, so it would be very appropriate
to the musical drama if Tchaikovsky had sown in the feuding music of [A]
the origins of the love-theme of [B]. Listen hard: what do you think?
.
© Paul Serotsky
37, Mayfield Grove,
Brighouse,
West Yorkshire HD6 4EE
contact@serotsky.f9.co.uk
Conditions
for use apply. Details here
Copyright in these notes is retained by the author without whose prior written permission they may not be used, reproduced, or kept in any form of data storage system. Permission for use will generally be granted on application, free of charge subject to the conditions that (a) the author is duly credited, and (b) a donation is made to a charity of the author's choice.