FINALE: MOZART, BEETHOVEN & ELGAR

Ensemble 360

Crucible Playhouse, Sheffield
Saturday 24 May 2025, 7.00pm

Tickets:
£22
£14 UC, PIP & DLA
£5 Students & Under 35s 

Book Tickets
Ensemble 360 musicians

MOZART Flute Quartet in D K285 (15′) 
BEETHOVEN Quintet for Piano and Wind Op.16 (30′) 
ELGAR Piano Quintet Op.84 (40′)  

 In a nostalgic nod to Ensemble 360’s beginnings, the group revisits the music from their very first concert in this 20th anniversary Festival Finale. The first of Mozart’s virtuosic flute quartets opens the evening, followed by a warm and witty work by Beethoven. The Finale culminates with a burst of energy in Elgar’s glorious Piano Quintet. 

Performed by the group in 2005, shortly after its establishment by Music in the Round, this concert was specifically curated to showcase the breadth and diversity of Sheffield’s stunning new resident ensemble. This ‘repeat’ performance of the same joyous music celebrates Ensemble 360 and highlights the group’s extraordinary musical strengths once more. 

Save 20% when you book for 10 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction.  
Save 10% when you book for 5 or more Music in the Round concerts in one transaction. Find out more. 

MOZART Wolfgang Amadeus, Flute Quartet in D K285

Allegro
Adagio
Rondo

Mozart’s Paris visit in 1778 was essentially a job-hunting exercise, and an opportunity to find new patrons and supporters. It wasn’t a success, partly because Paris was not especially enthusiastic about his music at the time. Immediately before that trip, he had been in Mannheim where he met a Dutch surgeon and amateur flautist, Ferdinand De Jean, who commissioned some new pieces from him. The Flute Quartet in D K285, completed on Christmas Day 1777, is a beautifully crafted and often sparkling work: whatever Mozart’s well-known reservations about the flute, they certainly aren’t reflected in the quality of the music he composed here.

Nigel Simeone © 2012

BEETHOVEN Ludwig Van, Quintet for Piano and Wind Op.16

Grave – Allegro ma non troppo
Andante cantabile
Rondo. Allegro ma non troppo

Beethoven completed his Quintet for Piano and Wind in 1797, five years after his arrival in Vienna, taking Mozart’s quintet for the same instrumental combination as his model, and it’s probably no coincidence that one of Beethoven’s closest friends – Nikolaus Zmeskall von Domanovecz – owned the autograph manuscript of Mozart’s work at the time. Yet despite some obvious parallels in terms of structure and even some of the thematic material, the Beethoven Quintet sounds very individual. As Cliff Eisen has written: ‘Beethoven [remained] true to his own voice, some obvious modellings of his quintet on Mozart’s notwithstanding: their keys and unusual scoring are identical, and both begin with elaborate slow introductions. At 416 bars, however, the first movement of Beethoven’s quintet far exceeds Mozart’s in scale: as in so many of his chamber and solo works, Beethoven aspires to the symphonic, something that is alien to Mozart’s greater intimacy and concision.’

Nigel Simeone © 2011

ELGAR Edward, Piano Quintet in A minor Op.84

Moderato – Allegro
Adagio
Andante – Allegro

Elgar’s Piano Quintet is one of his last large-scale works, dating from the same period as the Violin Sonata and the Cello Concerto. In October 1918, Elgar wrote to the critic Ernest Newman, telling him that the first movement of his Piano Quintet was ready: ‘I want you to hear it. It is strange music I think, and I like it – but it’s ghostly stuff.’ The work was to be dedicated to Newman. The first private performance of the complete work took place on 7 March 1919 at Severn House, Elgar’s London home. George Bernard Shaw was there, and his reaction was enthusiastic: ‘The Quintet knocked me over … This was the finest thing of its kind since [Beethoven’s] Coriolan.’ Shaw is presumably referring here to the dark, uneasy opening which certainly recalls the mood of Beethoven’s overture.

As the introduction gives way to the main Allegro another influence is apparent: the Piano Quintet by Brahms. It is presumably the sweeping, passionate drive of the musical argument in this movement – punctuated by some dramatic references back to the introductory music – that led the English musicologist and Elgar biographer Percy Young to describe it in the most glowing terms, declaring that it was ‘in some ways Elgar’s finest movement’. The work’s central Adagio begins with a tranquil viola solo, supported by the other strings. This expansive movement is crowned by a passionate climax of almost orchestral grandeur, before subsiding back to the gentler, calmer mood of the opening. After a brief introduction that becomes increasingly agitated, the main theme of the finale is a noble arching theme marked ‘with dignity, song-like’. Much of the movement is restrained and reflective, but at the close Elgar drives home his musical ideas to a powerful and thrilling conclusion.

Nigel Simeone © 2011

You May Also Like...