Páginas

Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Haydn, Symphony No 101, "The Clock"


Since the death of the "Bach of London", Johann Christian Bach, in 1782, the music of Franz Joseph Haydn in that city had been progressively increasing to the point where "it was difficult to find a concert that did not include a piece by him", according to a historian of the time.

Therefore, numerous efforts had been made to arrange a visit of the illustrious composer, which always met with Haydn's refusal. The maestro did not want for anything in the world to bother his patron Nikolaus Esterhazy, whom he served for more than thirty years, as kapellmeister, even if it was in the court of a remote palace isolated in the Hungarian countryside.

A new patron
But with Nikolaus's death in 1790, the master's responsibilities were relieved. Nikolaus was succeeded by his son Anton, a prince with little interest in the arts. Anton got rid of most of the musicians, although he kept Haydn in his post, even increasing his pension, without asking for anything special in return. Faced with the new scenario, Haydn took the opportunity to leave for Vienna as soon as he could. Soon after, the Bonn-born violinist Johann Peter Solomon, who was making a career in London as a concert organizer and clamored for Haydn's competition, came to his house in Vienna. The maestro could not refuse: the conditions were magnificent. Thus, at age 58, Haydn left his native country for the first time. On January 1, 1791, he crossed the Channel and saw the ocean for the first time.

Joseph Haydn (1732 - 1809),
painting from 1792
In London
The stay in London resulted in a series of resounding successes, from the professional and financial points of view. The visit had to be repeated two years later. Fruit of those two stays are the so-called "London Symphonies", twelve in all, which represent the pinnacle of the maestro's symphonic creation. Among them are several of the most popular ones born from his pen. For example, the symphony "The Surprise" (No. 94), the "Military" (No. 100), and the so-called "The Clock" (No. 101), the latter two belonging to the second London series, that is, the fruit of the second trip, in the years 1794-95.

Symphony No 101, in D major, Hob 1:101, "The Clock"
(Hob, after Antony van Hoboken, the author of the catalog).
The popular title comes from the quavers of the slow movement, Andante, which follow one after the other with the regularity of a clock. Its premiere took place in London on March 3, 1794, as part of a series of concerts of Haydn's works organized, of course, by his colleague and friend Solomon. The work was applauded with the usual enthusiasm reserved for the works of the "tireless, marvelous and sublime Haydn", as a London newspaper called him on the occasion.

Its movements are four, as usual for a symphony:
00        Adagio - Presto
08:42  Andante
16:23  Minuetto - Allegretto
23:53  Vivace

The performance is by the Orquesta Sinfónica de Galicia, conducted by Richard Egarr.