Four Centuries of Great Music August 20, 2022 The Symphony Through the Centuries
Today on Four Centuries of Great music is the first of several episodes celebrating the symphony through the centuries.
A
symphony is an extended musical composition in Western classical music,
most often for orchestra. The most common meaning is a work usually
consisting of multiple distinct sections or movements. Symphonies are
almost always scored for an orchestra consisting of a string section
(violin, viola, cello, and double bass), brass, woodwind, and percussion
instruments which altogether number about 30 to 100+ musicians.
Symphonies are notated in a musical score, which contains all the
instrument parts. Orchestral musicians play from parts which contain
just the notated music for their own instrument.
The first time
the word was used to describe a musical composition was in 1597 with
Giovanni Gabrieli's Sacrae symphoniae. But this was a sacred work with
minimal instrumentation and voices which was really just a modified
motet with mass movements. The first truly instrumental symphony was
Lodovico Grossi da Viadana's Sinfonie musicali, Op. 18, published in
1610. This had 18 movements with dance designations so was really a
suite rather than the symphony we are familiar with.
During the
baroque period the term went unused with the various concerto Grossi of
the period being the closest thing to what we consider a symphony to
be. These were almost always in 3 movements fast-slow-fast.
Franz Joseph Haydn in the classical period is who really developed the modern symphony which is comprised of four movements:
1. Fast - an opening sonata usually allegro but can have sections of varying tempo
2. Slow (andante or lento)
3. Playful - minuet and trio which became a scherzo
4. Fast - allegro or presto in rondo or sonata form
Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #3 in G Major
Haydn’s
first and second symphonies followed the baroque 3 movement
fast-slow-fast but with his 3rd symphony he began the 4 movement form we
are familiar with today. It was written between 1760 and 1762 and It
is scored for 2 oboes, bassoon, 2 horns, strings and continuo. The
opening movement is in sonata form. The winds are not used in the slow
movement, but the trio of the minuet shows the first emergence of winds
from their lesser position in the orchestra. The Minuet is a canon
between the higher and lower voices and the Finale is also contrapuntal.
It is a fugue with two subjects that also integrates elements of sonata
form.
Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (the London)
Of
course with each subsequent symphony most keeping the 4 movement form,
there was an advancement in the complexity and length of each work.
Haydn’s last numbered symphony was his 104 “London” symphony. It was
actually the last of the 12 symphonies he wrote while residing in
London. The work was composed in 1795 and end premiered to great
success at the King's Theatre on 4 May 1795, in a concert featuring
exclusively Haydn's own compositions and directed by the composer.
Haydn wrote in his diary "The whole company was thoroughly pleased and
so was I. I made 4000 gulden on this evening: such a thing is possible
only in England.” It is in 4 movements
The first movement Marked
Adagio-Allegro. After a slow and grand introduction in D minor, the
main body of the sonata form movement, in D major. The movement is mono
thematic with the theme first in the strings and then transposed to A
major in the woodwinds. This is followed by the development which begins
in B minor, using the rhythmic pattern of the second half of the theme.
The development ends with the full orchestra. In the recapitulation,
the first theme is heard again in D Major. It uses imitative patterns of
the woodwinds in the second theme. The movement closes with a coda,
also in D major.
The second movement marked Andante is in G
major, opens with the main theme in the strings. After this, a brief
episode highlighting A minor and D minor leads to a modified repeat of
the main theme in both strings and bassoon. From here, a second section
begins with modulation to various other keys, including G minor and B♭
major, but continues to feature the melody of the main theme. After
arriving on the dominant of G major, the music of the first section
returns. The rest of the movement consists of a modification of the
first section of music, with several changes in rhythm and more
prominence to the winds, especially the flute.
The third movement
is a minuet and trio in D major marked allegro. The minuet section
consists of a rounded binary (A,B,A') form with an opening section
emphasizing the tonic, while the second section visits the relative
minor (B minor) and the dominant (A major). The trio is in B♭ major, and
uses the oboe and bassoon extensively. Like in the minuet, this trio's B
section emphasizes the relative minor (in this case, G minor). The trio
ends with a transition back to dominant of the main key in preparation
for the return to the minuet.
The exuberant finale, marked
Spiritoso, is in fast tempo and in sonata form. It opens in the mode of
folk music using a drone bass and a theme often claimed to have
originated as a Croatian folk song. The development section settles on
the dominant of the main key (which is A Major), as is typical, but the
recapitulation does not occur immediately. Instead, the development is
extended with a section in F♯ minor, after which the recapitulation in D
major follows immediately.
Here is a performance of the first
two movement of Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (the London) by
Sydney Lark conducting the London Festival Orchestra from the album
Haydn: Symphonies #99 & 104 Point
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter.
Although
there were several composers who composed symphonies during the
classical period, the other main contributor to this literature is
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart who composed what many feel is the one of the
finest examples of the symphony ever written and that is his Symphony
#41 in C Major, The Jupiter. There is a wonderful discussion of this
symphony by Gerard Schwarz along with a performance of the complete
symphony by the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gerard
Schwarz from the album Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41,
Musically Speaking. Musically Speaking Records
- 3:00pm Four Centuries of Great Music by Introduction on Four Centuries of Great Music (Pre-recorded)
- 3:01pm Commentary on the Music by Dave Lake on live (live)
- 3:04pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #3 in G Major I. Allegro by Ádám Fischer conducting the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra on Haydn: The Complete Symphonies (Wyastone Estate Limited)
- 3:10pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #3 in G Major II. Andante moderato by Ádám Fischer conducting the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra on Haydn: The Complete Symphonies (Wyastone Estate Limited)
- 3:16pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #3 in G Major III. Minuet & Trio by Ádám Fischer conducting the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra on Haydn: The Complete Symphonies (Wyastone Estate Limited)
- 3:20pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #3 in G Major IV. Finale (allegro) by Ádám Fischer conducting the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra on Haydn: The Complete Symphonies (Wyastone Estate Limited)
- 3:21pm Commentary on the Music by Dave Lake on live (live)
- 3:22pm Four Centuries of Great Music by Mid-hour Break on Live (Live)
- 3:24pm Commentary on the Music by Dave Lake on live (live)
- 3:28pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (The London): I. Adagio-Allegro by Sydney Lark conducting the London Festival Orchestra on Haydn: Symphonies #99 & 104 (Point Classics)
- 3:37pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (The London): II. Andante by Sydney Lark conducting the London Festival Orchestra on Haydn: Symphonies #99 & 104 (Point Classics)
- 3:44pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (The London): III. Minuet and Trio by Sydney Lark conducting the London Festival Orchestra on Haydn: Symphonies #99 & 104 (Point Classics)
- 3:49pm Franz Joseph Haydn’s Symphony #104 (The London): IV. Finale-Spiritoso by Sydney Lark conducting the London Festival Orchestra on Haydn: Symphonies #99 & 104 (Point Classics)
- 3:54pm Commentary on the Music by Dave Lake on live (live)
- 3:56pm Commentary on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - I. Allegro Vivace by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:00pm Commentary on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - I. Allegro Vivace by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:00pm Four Centuries of Great Music I August 14, 2022 Symphonies through the Centuries Episode 1 Part 2 by Symphonies through the Centuries on Four Centuries of Great Music
- 4:04pm Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - I. Allegro Vivace by Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:16pm Commentary on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - II. Andante by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:23pm Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - II. Andante by Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:34pm Four Centuries of Great Music by Mid-hour Break on Live (Live)
- 4:37pm Commentary on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - III. Menuetto by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:38pm Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - III. Menuetto by Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:43pm Commentary on Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - IV. Finale-Molto Allegro by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:51pm Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Symphony #41 in C Major, The Jupiter - IV. Finale-Molto Allegro by Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra conducted by Gerard Schwarz on Mozart: Symphony No. 40, Symphony No. 41, Musically Speaking (Musically Speaking Records)
- 4:59pm Four Centuries of Great Music by Closing on Live (Live)
- 4:59pm Default User by Live