I wasn't aware that there was a question.
Prokofiev 'Other' Symphonies
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostMsg 29 attempts to imply one.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostProkofiev, on hearing the premiere, considered this symphony a failure ("Neither I nor the audience understood anything in it"). For many years he intended to revise it, recasting it in three movements, but never got around to it.
"Symphony No. 2: This symphony is Prokofiev's least known and one of his most inventive. He wanted this work to be a symphony composed in a modernistic vein, a symphony "compounded of iron and steel," as he put it, and he succeeded brilliantly. Cast in two movements, an Allegro ben articulato and a Theme with variations, this symphony is the nearest Prokofiev came to rivaling what Stravinsky achieved in the Rites of Spring. Prokofiev's use of martial, driving rhythm in the first movement is exhilarating, yet a strong melodic line runs through this music also; the overall effect, while somewhat harsh, is extremely exciting. The second movement opens with a theme that is, without question, one of Prokofiev's most inspired and lyrically tender; the variations that follow are imaginative and exciting, the symphony ending with a return of the contemplative variation theme in a manner that is quite poignant. While it is true that certain passages in this symphony have a balletic feel to them, the strength of the melodic invention is so high that the piece remains consistently fascinating. This work has the potential to be much more popular than it currently is with the concert- going public; I suspect a ballet set to this music could be a crowd-pleaser and would allow the music to become better known."
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Originally posted by Suffolkcoastal View Postthere are some scoring issues in the 1st movement
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAre you able to expand on the context of that quote?
As for recasting the piece in three movements, who can say what the composer had in mind?
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostGave 3 a spin a few days ago, Leinsdorf/Boston on Testament. I liked it better more than I had in the past, and will trot it out again. The recording isn't particularly stellar--very two dimensional with constricted sound stage despite being early stereo
I know and like symphonies 1, 2, 5 and 6 as well, to differing degrees, the spirit of Tchaikovsky hovers over no.5, I find, though one hears quite a few influences in these symphonies I think (not least the 1st!)
An arbitrary point that occurs is that at times, Prokofiev seems almost to smear brass themes across the music, like lipstick across a face - there's a nice example early in the last variation of the 2nd symphony, but elsewhere too - anyway striking stuff.
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If this thread is going to go OT, perhaps it would be interesting to consider Prokofiev's 'other' piano sonatas. Apart from the 'war trilogy' (6, 7 & 8) these nine works are remarkably little known, at least in the West. The fourth sonata (curiously subtitled 'From Old Notebooks') is well worth hearing in the recording by Richter. Does anyone here have any recommendations? I once got the whole lot out of my local library and tried to play bits of them, but they were quite beyond me.
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