Stephen Hartke
CONCERTO FOR VIOLIN AND ORCHESTRA
"Auld Swaara" (1993)
Commissioned by Koussevitzky Music Foundation for Michelle Makarski and the Albany
Symphony Orchestra
Duration: 28 Minutes
I. Allegro festivo
II. Auld Swaara -- Fantasy on a Shetland Fiddle Tune
Orchestra
2 Flutes (both double Piccolo), 2 Oboes (2nd doubles English Horn), 2 B-flat Clarinets, 2
Bassoons (2nd doubles Contrabassoon), 4 Horns, 2 Trumpets, 3 Trombones, Tuba, 4
Percussionists (4 pairs of Drumsticks, Vibraslap, Sistrum, Castanets, Maracas, Wood
Block, Bass Drum, Tamtam, Vibraphone, Marimba, Timpani), and Strings
My violin concerto is cast in two movements, the first of which might be regarded as the
concerto proper, and the second as a companion piece to it, an extended epilogue. In
writing the first movement, I had in mind the vigor and brightness of the Italian Baroque
concerto, as well as its traditional three part form: two fast sections flanking a
subordinate slower section. The movement begins with four pairs of drum-sticks struck
together four times, quickly setting the stage for the violin's opening dance-like solo. The
orchestra gradually joins in, arranged in choral groups: high string harmonics, low brass
chords, piccolos with violins, each playing material unique to that instrumentation and
each with a slightly different idea of where the downbeat is. The violin dances on above
this shifting background, sometimes leading the dance, other times picking up an idea
from the orchestra and veering off with it in a new direction. The middle section begins
with a slow series of quiet chords, moving from strings to mallet percussion to winds
and, finally, to low horn, tuba, and basses. A recurrent four-note rhythmic figure in the
timpani and contrabassoon might be heard as an echo of the four opening drum-stick
strokes. The violin sings a long, arching melody in double-stops, and then lads on to a
series of progressively faster sections, each of which has something of the character of a
variation on the preceding one. This process culminates in a sudden explosion of rattles
clearing the way for the final section. Marked "quasi una cadenza," the last part opens
with a spirited exchange between the soloist and entire orchestra, as if the violin were
challenging the orchestra to a duel. the soloist then rushes off in a new direction, the
orchestra following with fragments from the first section, finally building to a fast coda.
With the dancing over now, in the second movement the soloist has become a traveler
journeying homeward in a broad musical landscape. The thematic basis for this
movement is "Auld Swaara," a Shetland Island fiddle tune. A lament for a lost fisherman,
it is traditionally played by Shetland fiddlers at day's end just before putting the
instrument away. In my piece, the tune appears at first in elusive fragments, gradually
becoming clearer towards the end, when the violin plays it (or, rather, my own free
adaptation of it) in its entirety against a background of slowly drifting string chords that
part for the soloist like clouds.
Recording:
Riverside Symphony
Michelle Makarski, violin
George Rothman, Conductor
New World Records
80533-2
Concerto for Violin
and Orchestra