Expressive Emotion and Symphonic Economy : A Note on Recent Works by Uroš Krek Emocionalna izraznost in simfonična ekonomičnost :

Uroš Krek povezuje v svoji glasbi simfonično ekonomičnost z emocionalno izraznostjo. To je videti že tudi v njegovih zgodnejših neoklasicistič­ nih delih in skladbah, napisanih pod vplivom ljudske glasbe. Mnogo od teh del je bilo namenjenih godalom, ki jim je Krek še posebej naklonjen. V Krekovi glasbi 70. let je opaziti široko uporabo izjemno razvitega motivičnega dela, v katerem se kaže skladateljev posebej spreten pristop. Svoje motive spreminja ritmično, z inverzijo, s preurejevanjem in spreminjanjem tonov. Te značilnosti so zelo jasne tudi v novejših delih, tako v Godalnem sekstetu iz 1990, v katerem edinstveno in prepričljivo povezuje variacijsko tehniko ter motivično transformacijo z intenzivno emocionalno izraznostjo.

The music of Uroš Krek combines symphonic economy with expressive emotion.Even in the earlier neo-classical and folk music influenced works, this character was evident.Many of these works are written for string instruments for which Krek has a particular interest and affinity.The music of the 1970s contains an extensive use of a highly developed motivic activity which shows his flexible approach.His motives change by rhythm, inversion, reordering, and changing notes.These features are also very evident in more recent works, notably the Streichsextett of 1990 which combines variation technique and motivic transformation in a unique and satisfying way with an intense emotional expression.
For over half a century the music of Uroš Krek has impressed the musical world with its skill, imagination and variety.It has a distinctive voice, but its style includes many clear strands: one can note certain influences, but they are almost always so fully absorbed into the textures and idiom that it would be inaccurate to use the word 'eclectic'.One of Krek's earliest works, the Simfonietta of 1951, is notable for its engaging neoclassical idiom and its tight symphonic economy: it is these two features, representing heart and mind respectively, which appear so strongly in most of his music.
As a string player himself Krek naturally exploited the possibilities of string sound in the following years.Two such works from this tirne are outstanding: Mouvements concertants of 1955 and the Sonatina for strings of 1956.The former is forward looking and full of conflict.Gone are the easy-going and entertaining melodies of the Simfonietta; in their place is a collection of emotionally charged motives that present a conflict that finally resolves itself in an amazingly structured and finally peaceful passacaglia on an original theme.The Sonatina is not so full of conflict, but again it uses short and fertile motives with an economy that is hardly suggested by the exuberant tone of the work.
From 1958 to 1967 the composer's position as a researcher at the Ethnographic Institute in Ljubljana gave him access to and familiarity with large numbers of folk melodies.This affected his original music in much the same way as a similar experience affected Bela Bartok.Krek occasionally arranged folk music for modern performers, as in Pet ljudskih pesmi of 1963, in which songs from Rezija, Medjimurje and Prekmurje are given with modem piano accompaniments.Normally, however, he took elements from folk music practice and incorporated these into his already established style.One can sense that this happened very soon as in his Rapsodični ples ('Rhapsodic Dance') for orchestra of 1959.Here the motives on which the work is built have the distinct inflections of folk music, short scalic runs and the use of the interval of the augmented second, for example, but they are used in a 'symphonic' manner which makes it clear that Krek is simply imbuing his music with the spirit of the music of his country.
Four works for solo performer and orchestra, dating from the 1960s, show Krek absorbing folk influence into his music in a natura!and subtle way.In the Concerto for horn and strings of 1960 he contrasted a free horn melody with a predominantly rhythmic section that uses 8/8 tirne divided into 3+2+3, a common folk rhythm from Slovenia and the Medjimurje region of Croatia.Similarly in the brilliantly delicate Concertino for piccolo and orchestra of 1967, there are passages of folk-derived rhythms, e.g. in the coda of the second movement.The more introspective and emotionally charged concerto, lnventiones ferales for violin and strings of 1962, used the Istrian mode for some of its melodic material, in a disguised manner, while there are melodic lines with simple, folklike stepwise movement in the visionary song-cycle with string orchestra, Staroegiptolfrske stroje ('Old Egyptian Verses').Krek's use of folk-derived elements took their place very naturally in his style.
Even in these works there are the beginnings of new techniques.The Concertino for piccolo has increasing use of passages of free rhythm in unbarred sections and Staroegiptovske strofeuse recitative techniques.These now make a modest appearance in works from the 1970s such as the Sinfonia per archi of 1973.Much more important than this is the extension of the use of melodic motives and cells which dominate Krek's musical thinking in the years 1970-80.A flexible approach to rhythmic variety and variations in the intervals used in these motives is a dominating feature of the Salo-Sonata for two violins of 1972.Yet this work is not an abstruse intellectual exercise, but a vigorous creation of Bart6kian splendour.Krek's manipulation of melodic cells in the homophonic, heterophonic and contrapuntal sections of his Sinfonia per archi is very impressive, but the work's intensity is never compromised by this melodic economy.The same can be said of two other string works of the tirne, the Duo for violin and viola and the Trio for string trio, and the piano piece, Sur une melodie, of 1977.It is, however, the second movement of the Sonata for clarinet and piano (completed in 1977) that is a tour-deforce of motivic working, a staggering display of how these fragments can be repeated, juggled, transformed and juxtaposed.Again the intellectual side of the piece is balanced by a warm and moving intensity in the first movement and in the second movement an exultant virtuosity that always arises from the needs of the music.
Krek's more recent works have built on the methods established in his earlier music.These techniques, applied imaginatively and almost unobtrusively as part of the compo-ser's style, can be found in vocal and instrumenta!works for many different combinations.The small-scale choral works, for example, use a well-managed combination of homophonic and contrapuntal techniques.'Three Autumn Songs from 1991 for mixed chorus combine straightforward but subtly varied imitation between the different voices, sometimes by inversion, with chordal passages of an unambiguous luminosity that one finds at all stages in the composer' s career.The English words of] ohn Gracen Brown are treated with great sensitivity, for example, in the closing bars of the third song where autumn is turning to winter.The texture and harmonic progression are simple, but the false relations create a very colourful sound.We can find many of the same features in the setting of the 42nd psalm, Salmo Xlll also of 1991.Here the opening Latin words are presented imitatively but unpredictably in the different parts.Again the word setting is very clearly intended to be heard, with numerous examples of words sensitively presented.The Latin words of the Roman poet Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) are set vividly by Krek in the four-part chorus, Vester; Camenae of 1994.While the composer keeps his music within a broad tonality, his use of a wide range of dissonance points the meaning of the words very clearly.The setting of jutranja pesem ('Morning Song') by Adam Bohorič (1520-98) dates from 1996.The accompaniment ofbrass quintet and bells is a typically unusual touch by Krek.It is very interesting how, even in such a short piece, he builds up a range of motives that infiltrate the texture without ever dominating the choral parts.In some respects it is a little like the Baroque chorale prelude in its treatment, with the choir's music presented homophonically and the instrumenta!parts acting mostly as a counterpoint until the fina!bars in which the words, 'bratce, sestrice in vso družbo.Amen', are sung in a blaze of glory by the choir, accompanied by brass with the bells ringing above the other sounds.
A single voice and solo brass instrument are both featured in Krek's thanksgiving cantata for soprano, trum pet and organ called Cantus gratias agentis -Zahvalni spev of 1994, set to Krek' s own Latin words.Although only a short work, it falls into a number of short sections.It appears something like a baroque passacaglia but that is only a superficial impression; rather Krek treats the opening section to a series of free variations.In the same way as in earlier works the various melodic cells or motives are expanded, contracted or transformed in the composer's flexible manner.The soprano part and the trumpet's mostly ornamenta!or connecting phrases derive their melodic lines from the opening organ part.The form of the work is well tailored to the words.Three times Krek sets to the same melodic phrase the refrain, 'Laudibus te effero et tibi gratias ago' CI cover you with praises and give you thanks).It is placed after the opening verse, a second tirne in the middle of the work, and a third tirne at the end, each tirne set.Between each statement the music moves through a harmonic and melodic fantasy before returning each tirne to the spiritual core of the work.It is the contrast of intense emotion with his economy of means which gives the work its power.
Krek' s recent work has been marked by a number of works for solo instrument and piano.What is immediately apparent in these works is the composer's handling of form which shows little debt to any models, but is always controlled by a skilful handling of motives and harmonic material.Typical of this is his single-movement Appassionato for flute and piano of 1989, whose subtitle gives a clue to the composer's method: para/rasi per jlauto e pianoforte.Like Cantus gratias agentis it is written as a single movement in a number of sections of varying tempos which are almost seamlessly linked by the similarity of motives.Its fantasy character is immediately apparent.At the same tirne Krek establishes his musical motives in a subtle fashion: the piano's accompanying figures achieve a strong unity by balancing repetition and change.The development of new phrases out of previous ones is a technique that Krek features very strongly here and one that links the sections.Yet there is also a connection with traditional formal structures: the opening slow sections (Moderato -Poco piu largamente -Piu mosso -Andante -Lento) form the first 'movement', the next two (Allegretto, pochissimo meno mosso del movimento precedente -Quasi marcia) form a march-like movement but are linked by a dominant triplet motive that featured strongly in works of the 1970s, the next two (Moderato -Poco piu largamente) form a slbw introduction to the brilliant dance-like final Allegro assai which is the longest section in the work.
Even a modest single-movement work like the charming Sarabanda per Nataša of 1993 for clarinet and piano is scrupulously worked out in all its motivic transformations.One example is a triplet figure that moves by step but is constantly changing its tones and semitones.The more extended and substantial Invocazione for oboe and piano of the previous year develops its material from the opening recitative-like opening statements from the oboe in a way that the attentive listener can follow without difficulty.As in Appassionato for flute the shorter sections are naturally grouped by their sharing of melodic motives and by the skilfully composed transitions between them.The 2/4 final section marked Animato concludes the work in a dance-like way that displays the same spirit that informs Krek's neo-classical music of the 1950s, while at the same tirne showing a neat and predse economy of melodic motives.While Krek's writing for wind instruments is sonically effective and gratefully written, even if sometimes difficult to play, his music for string instruments is exceptional.Two recent works for violin and piano are good examples: Vigoroso of 1991 and Seconda sonata (Erinnerungen) of 1994.The former is a single-movement multi-tempo piece that lasts just under ten minutes.The way that Krek builds up his form is fascinating: the opening Movimentato in 12/8 tirne sets the character for the three parts of the opening section as well as for the closing section.Between these there is a brilliant dance-like section in 3/8 and a short Largo.The four broad sections are played without a break with thematic connections that are not immediately obvious.The whole has a fantasy character with some features which suggest folk violin playing, notably the almost Bart6kian violin phrases of the opening (Ex.1).As with much of Krek's music the music has a Movimentato J = 84 Violin ' '

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Ex.1 Uroš Krek: Vigoroso per violino e pianoforte (bars 1-7, violin part only) strong emotional cbaracter coupled witb tbematic unity.Seconda sonata (Erinnerungen) is more expansive and, unlike many recent works, cast in tbree separate movements.Tbe beadings of tbese movements, Contemplativo, Inquieto and Giusto, give some idea of tbeir individual cbaracters, but, as in the single movement works, there is considerable variety witbin eacb one.Tbe first and tbird movements are very free ternary structures, witb tbe first based on a recitative tbat is fertile witb motives, and tbe tbird ona developing melodic formula wbose 5/4 (2+3) metrical pattern is used to great effect to build up tension.Tbe central movement, entitled 'Inquieto', bas a mucb more subtle construction: tbe plan, according to tempo, can be seen as ABACA, but witb tbe constant interplay of motives, tbis sounds more like a free fantasy.One of tbe motives tbat appears in one form or anotber in all tbree movements, bas a long bistory in Krek's music.His works from tbe 1970s frequently feature a triplet of semiquavers followed by a quaver or crotcbet.Tbe notes rise twice and tben fall back to a central one (or move in the opposite direction): typically tbis consisted of a rising tbird, tben a sixtb, falling back to tbe tbird.Ex.2 takes tbe clarinet part of the opening of tbe The freedom with which he treats the changing identity of his motives identity gives a clue to the understanding of the variation technique of the last work to be considered in this survey, Streichsextett uber ein Thema von Frank Martin of 1990, composed for the Zurich String Sextet.Krek's choice of a theme by Frank Martin was a tribute to the nationality of the Swiss players, but it was also because of the affinity that Krek' s music has with the music of Frank Martin.The work's emotional tone is very strong with a powerful intensity immediately obvious in the harmonies found in the theme taken from the opening of the second movement of Frank Martin's Cello Concerto.This atmosphere is maintained throughout despite the many tempo changes and the constantly changing textures which are enabled by the six string parts.
Although written as a continuous piece of nearly twenty minutes' duration, it is composed in nine distinct sections: Theme -Interlude 1 -Variation 1 -Interlude 2 -Variation 2 -Variation 3 -Interlude 3 -Variation 4 -Postlude.Because the theme and the first interlude forma unified section, the work naturally falls into a symmetrical pattern (see Table 1 It is completely typical of the flexible variation technique that Krek used in this work.After the slow and emphatic Variation 2, the composer subjects his melodic fragments to a virtuoso treatment of strong rhythmic drive in Variation 3. The expressive relaxation of Interlude 3 recalls the intensity of the theme itself but develops the motivic activity very clearly.The central section (Doppio movimento) adds newly derived elements in counterpoint to the mainly slowly moving lines found in the outer sections.It is somewhat tedious to describe the processes that Krek uses in the Streichsextett, as they depend for their effect on an audible association of ideas that is not always straightforward to explain.The fact that this constant flux of motives is being handled so apparently effortlessly makes the work's intense expression so easily communicated.It is in fact this combination of motivic economy and expressive sound that gives Krek's music its distinctive character and its unique power.
tbe Sonata for clarinet and piano of 1977.Bar 4 bas tbe motive in its rising form and bars 9-10 in its falling version.Note, bowever, tbat tbe note following tbe triplet is a semitone lower tban tbe middle note of tbe triplet wbicbever direction it is played.In bars 12 and 16 tbe first and second notes of tbe triplet are reversed wbile stili leaving tbe note following tbe triplet a semitone lower than tbe middle-pitcbed note of tbe triplet.At otber places in tbis movement Krek alters tbe triplet's order and tbe intervals asa way of creating variety.In tbe Seconda sonata tbis triplet takes many forms, but it is immediately recognisable in most cases.Ex.3 shows how Krek incorporated this triplet type (but with different intervals) into the second movement of his sonata.Note how here the intervals change in bars one, five and six.This use of a particularly identifiable but constantly changing motive is a hallmark of the composer's style and a strong unifying factor.lnteDl!M>.d'inizio)•~Krek: Seconda Sonata (Erinnerungen) per violino e pianoforte (2nd movement 'Inquieto', bars 59-65, violin part only)