Originally posted by Roehre
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Symphonies with organ
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Stravinsky neatly encapsulates the problem. Ask "what is a symphony?", and we have two broadly based on classical models - Symphony in C and the Symphony in 3 Movements; the Symphonies of Wind Instruments - using the term "symphony" in its original meaning, "sounding together"; and the Symphony of Psalms, whose static, hieratical character seems at odds with anything organic or developmental, but which would seem somehow diminished (and possibly played less often) if he'd called it Three Psalms, or Psalm-Suite.
So perhaps "Symphony" is as all-embracingly powerful, meaningful - and meaningless - as the term "Art"...Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 22-06-13, 01:03.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostEminem has just produced his Symphony in H. Doubt if it will feature an organ though. Or an orchestra?I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by Roehre View Post...If we are unable to emulate the 19th century musicologists in ticking boxes what defines a symphony, then I do think that the only way out of this "mess" is the way I tried to define the form, a work is a symphony as soon as the composer says it is one.
With JLW I do feel that there is a kind of autosuggestion involved too, an inner voice which tells us whether a real symphonic architecture or process is going on below the surface, and thus identifying works which are "symphonies" in all but name...
Then there are works that amount to symphonies (or 'almost-symphonies') even though the composer didn't call them that. Das Lied von der Erde is one example, or Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra, or Elgar's Falstaff (although there the composer did call it a 'symphonic study in C minor'). Elgar's The Black Knight, too, clearly follows the pattern of an orchestral symphony while remaining wholly choral. However, Elgar refrained from calling it a symphony - although RVW had no such compunction with his choral A Sea Symphony, which is arguably less symphonic.
There are works that have the scale but don't amount to symphonies, though much of this can only be opinion. I find it difficult to hear Tapiola as a symphony (its composer didn't call it one, of course) but I have no problem with Sibeius's 7th which is about the same length. I can't really see the Rite of Spring as symphonic, despite some superficial traits. As for someone like Delius - is Appalachia truly 'symphonic' (I've heard this argued) ...?
Then there are cases where we might not agree with the composer's view that a piece amounts to a symphony. In general, I don't think it is for others to take the snobbish view that "it's not a real symphony" - and not only because it's not easy to say what amount to a real symphony. If a composer in good faith uses the label 'symphony', we should accept it and try to understand why that label has been used. Even if we don't think it justified, the composer did.Last edited by Pabmusic; 21-06-13, 23:48.
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Originally posted by Tevot View PostThe Manfred Symphony by Tchaikovsky. The Organ comes in towards the very end...
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostI have actually played (trombone) in Alexandre Guilmant's Symphonie No. 1 in D minor for organ and orchestra, Op. 42 (1874)
Pretty obscure, Koussevitsky used to programme it apparently... latterly recorded for Chandos by the BBC Phil under Y-P Tortelier... http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000000AUI
Perhaps one of those pieces it's more fun to play than to listen to
The slow movement's amiable enough: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vO5UlJ9O-ZQ
I do rather like Samuel Barber's Toccata Festiva, though.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Now I've sifted through the pages of this thread, and where it got bogged down in the debate of what is(n't) a symphony, I got lost. So I'll just list a few symphonies I'm aware of which call for organ, and apologise if there are any repeats of anything already mentioned above.
Arnold Bax 2, 4
Havergal Brian 1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 9 & 14
Josef Bohuslav Foerster 4 ("Easter Eve")
George Lloyd 7 (brief appearance at finale's climax, but what a moment!)
Khachaturian 3 (also includes 15 trumpets)
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I think that this topic merits being divided into consideration of orchestral symphonies that include an organ part that uses the instrument in a way and to an extent broadly equivalent to the use of piano as a percussion instrument in certain orchestral scores and those that actually feature it; in piano terms, one might think of the the piano's rôle in Messiaen's Turangalîla-Symphonie or Sorabji's First Symphony which is pretty much that of solo instrument throughout as distinct from its treatment in, say, Lutosławski's Third Symphony. Even in Saint-Saëns' Third Symphony, the rôle of the organ, though crucial, is very much that of "one of the orchestral instruments" rather than a concertante one.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostEven in Saint-Saëns' Third Symphony, the rôle of the organ, though crucial, is very much that of "one of the orchestral instruments" rather than a concertante one.
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