The Eighteenth-Century Wind Octet
In middle-eighteenth-century Europe, societies of noblemen found they
wanted a musical accompaniment to their meals, and musical entertainment
for their parties and other social events, indoors and outdoors. The wind
octet consisting of pairs of oboes, clarinets, horns, and bassoons --
given its own German name, Harmonie -- proved the ideal medium, and many
aristocrats established their own private octets; even public taverns
and other gathering-spots would engage the services of a professional
wind band.
The Opera Transcriptions
At first most Harmoniemusik consisted of transcriptions of the
popular operas (and occasionally symphonies) of the day; in fact such
transcription became big business. In July 1782 Mozart wrote to his father:
"I am up to my eyes in work, but by next Sunday I have to arrange
my opera [Abduction from the Seraglio] for wind instruments. If I don't,
someone will get to it before I do and reap the profits. You have no
idea how difficult it is to arrange a work of this kind for wind instruments,
so that it suits these instruments and yet loses none of its effect."
Mozart seems never to have completed his transcription: all his operas
in Harmoniemusik form have reached us through the pens of contemporaneous
oboists and clarinetists: Georg Triebensee, Johann Nepomuk Wendt, Joseph
Heidenreich. Mozart did, however, leave us evocative illustrations of
the two most important social functions of this music: the open-air serenade
in the Duet (no. 21) from Cosi fan tutte, and the banquet music in the
Act II Finale of Don Giovanni (where the cast sings of the "popular
operas of the day" --- and the onstage band plays The Marriage of
Figaro!).
Haydn's Divertimenti
Haydn wrote most of his wind divertimenti in the 1760s, and they often
followed the same five-movement scheme: a spirited introductory Allegro,
followed by a minuet (or other "character" movement), then a
more lyrical Adagio, then another minuet, and finally a relatively speedy
rondo-finale (Haydn's brother Michael referred to this type of finale
Allegro as the "Auskegler" -- literally the "bowl-out").
Tonight's C major Divertimento follows this sequence, while the B-flat
major Divertimento is in the alternative four-movement form, with the
outside fast movements bracketing a slow movement and a minuet (the finale
is not the typical "bowl-out," but a lilting allegro that end
quietly.)
Usually modest and practical, Haydn apparently did not often think of
himself as a pioneering musical genius, but rather as a self-described
"master musical craftsman" fulfilling the commissions of his
patrons and public. (His uncle and great-uncle had been master coach builders.)
Later in life he did shed some of his (false?) modesty: contemplating
his princely employer's 1766 move from Eisenstadt to Esterhazy (even farther
from Vienna, one of Europe's liveliest musical capitals), Haydn wrote:
"My prince was content with all my works, I received approval,
I could -- as head of an orchestra -- make experiments, observe what
created an impression and what weakened it, thus improving, adding to,
cutting away, and running risks. I was set apart from the world, there
was nobody in my vicinity to confuse and annoy me in my cause, and so
I had to become original."
Mozart's Serenade
Early April 1782 was a decisive moment in the history of windband music:
Emperor Joseph II established his kaiserliche Harmonie (imperial
wind octet), fueling a demand for new octets (along with the ubiquitous
opera transcriptions). It is likely that Mozart composed his Serenade
in E-flat major in late July 1782 for Joseph's musicians. Noted Mozart
scholar Robert Levin has observed:
"The fact that Mozart avoids fatiguing the listener with a surfeit
of the same sonorities, in music with a necessarily limited dynamic
and instrumental range, bears eloquent testimony to his genius. The
richness of the trio to the first minuet -- and its length -- demonstrates
that by this point in his artistic journey, Mozart insisted that even
entertainment music rise above chatty superficiality. As is so often
the case with Mozart, it is the slow movement, at the center of the
work's structure, whose warmth of sentiment forms the crown of the serenade.
Closing one's eyes today during an outdoor performance of this work,
it is easy to picture the evocative atmosphere of Vienna in the 1780s
forever idealized in works such as this."
Since an outdoor performance in Boston in February is impractical, we
offer tonight's serenade in the eighteenth-century beauty of Faneuil Hall.
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