The Burleske in D minor is a composition for piano and orchestra by Richard Strauss in 1885-86, when he was 21.
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The work's original title was Scherzo in D minor, and it was written for Hans von Bülow, who had appointed Strauss assistant conductor of the Meiningen Orchestra.[1] However, von Bülow considered it a "complicated piece of nonsense" and refused to learn it. He said the piano part was "Lisztian" and "unplayable", particularly for a pianist with a small handspan (Strauss says that von Bülow could barely reach an octave).[2] Strauss rehearsed the work with the Meiningen Orchestra, conducting and playing the solo part himself, but then set it aside. He wrote to von Bülow: "... given an outstanding (!) pianist, and a first-rate (!) conductor, perhaps the whole thing will not turn out to be the unalloyed nonsense I took it for after the first rehearsal. After the first run-through, I was totally discouraged ...".[1]
In 1889, Strauss became acquainted with Eugen d'Albert, who liked the work, although he suggested some cuts and changes to the piano part.[3] Strauss rededicated the revised work to d'Albert, who premiered it under its new title Burleske, at a convention of the General German Music Association[2] at Eisenach on 21 June 1890, in the same concert as the premiere of Strauss's Death and Transfiguration.[2][3] The word "Burleske" translates as "farce"[4] or "mockery".[1]
Von Bülow was still not impressed. In a letter to Johannes Brahms in January 1891 he wrote: "Strauss's Burleske decidedly has some genius in it, but in other respects it is horrifying."[3] Despite this, he conducted the work that month in Berlin, with Eugen d'Albert as soloist.[2]
Strauss was offered a handsome sum by a publisher for the rights to the work, but he was still not convinced of its merits, so he declined. He was no doubt influenced in his own opinion of the work by von Bülow's opinion of it. A quarter of a century later he wrote about von Bülow: "For anyone who ever heard him play Beethoven or conduct Wagner, who attended one of his piano lessons or observed him in orchestra rehearsal, he inevitably became the model of all the shining virtues of a performing artist, and his touching sympathy for me, his influence on the development of my artistic abilities, were the decisive factors in my career." [2]
However, in 1894 Strauss agreed to publication of the Burleske, although it took him a long time to regard it with great favour. It eventually became one of his favourite works, and he programmed it in his last concert in London with the Philharmonia Orchestra in September 1947,[2] along with Don Juan, the Symphonia Domestica and the waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier.
Strauss never allocated an opus number to the work,[1] but the opus number 11 has often come to be associated with it, although Strauss gave that number to his Horn Concerto No. 1 in E♭. It appears as number 85 in the catalogue by Erich Herrmann Mueller von Asow, and number 145 in that by Franz Trenner (see List of compositions by Richard Strauss#Other works).
The first performance of the Burleske in the United States was by Heinrich Gebhard with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, under Wilhelm Gericke, in April 1903.[2] The first performance in Australia was by Vera Bradford in 1937, with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra conducted by Georg Schnéevoigt. He had considered the piano part could only be managed by a male pianist, and demanded Vera Bradford be replaced; but she stood her ground, refused to defer to a male pianist, and gave an excellent performance.[5]
The piece starts with a theme introduced on timpani and answered by the orchestra. The piano then enters in a state of high excitement. A second, more lyrical Brahmsian theme, emerges, and this is followed by waltz-like measures not unlike the waltzes from Der Rosenkavalier. The work ends quietly, again on the timpani. The piece takes about 22 minutes to perform.
The piece is scored for piano solo and an orchestra of piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B-flat, 2 bassoons, 4 horns (2 in F, 2 in D), 2 trumpets, timpani, and strings.[6]
Notable performers who have played or recorded the Burleske include Martha Argerich, Claudio Arrau, Wilhelm Backhaus, Rudolf Buchbinder, Michel Dalberto, Malcolm Frager, Glenn Gould, Hélène Grimaud, Friedrich Gulda, Marc-André Hamelin, Byron Janis, Jeffrey Kahane, Alexander Lonquich, Elly Ney (1932), Sviatoslav Richter, Rudolf Serkin and Jean-Yves Thibaudet.
In 2001, the music was used for the ballet Burleske, choreographed for the New York City Ballet by Peter Martins.[7]