I think describing the Fourth Symphony as being a "largely re-worked" Third about as accurate as saying the same thing about RVW's or Sibelius', or Beethoven's ... two completely different works, each with their own areas of expression!
I think the flaw in these (otherwise very useful) programmes is the remit that seems to be propounded on the CotW website:
... so they've brought in a Lecturer in Film Studies from Keele University to keep repeating a "well, what the composer says might be taken with a pinch of salt" mantra and churning out "fluffy clouds" comments, such as suggesting that the Third Symphony "might" remind us of contemporary Polish events (or events that the composer "might have been recalling from his childhood"). Can the conclusion of the work be so inanely described as "optimistic" - the preceding passages simplified to "bleak and dark"? Considering the number of the composer's other works which end with this type of flourish such comments are empty and crass - unless the conclusion of the Preludes & Fugue (for example) also looks forward to the triumph of the Solidarity Union?
I think the flaw in these (otherwise very useful) programmes is the remit that seems to be propounded on the CotW website:
Witold Lutoslawski's extraordinary life mirrors the turbulent history of his homeland Poland, yet he consistently denied the effect of any of this tumult on his music. Donald Macleod is joined this week by Dr Nicholas Reyland to explore the truth of this denial alongside the life and career of one the most revered composers of the Twentieth Century.
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