More from the journey through my symphonic collection:
1962
Brian: Symphony No 20 in C sharp minor
Cowell: Symphony No 16 ‘Icelandic’
Fine: Symphony 1962
Frankel: Symphony No 2
Harris: Symphony No 8 ‘San Francisco’
Harris: Symphony No 9
K A Hartmann: Symphony No 8
Henze: Symphony No 5
Hoddinott: Symphony No 2
Hovhaness: Symphony No 15 ‘Silver Pilgrimage’
Joubert: Sinfonietta
Malipiero: Sinfonia per Antigenida
Pettersson: Symphony No 5
Q Porter: Symphony No 2
Rautavaara: Symphony No 4 ‘Arabescata’
Schuman: Symphony No 8
Searle: Symphony No 4
Shebalin: Symphony No 5
Shostakovich: Symphony No 13 in B flat minor ‘Babi Yar’
R Simpson: Symphony No 3
Skulte: Symphony No 3
Vainberg/Weinberg: Symphony No 5
Williamson: Symphony for Voices
Havergal Brian’s 20th Symphony is a three movement work of about 26 minutes duration and is IMO, one of the finest of Brian’s later symphonies. The first movement is restless and exploratory with a fairly muscular 1st subject and a more lyrical 2nd subject. The central movement is very expressive and haunting and among Brian’s best with real emotional depth. The finale is basically a Rondo in which an exuberant coda ends the symphony is a mood of triumph. An absorbing and rewarding symphony.
Cowell’s 16th Symphony is a five movement work of around 25b minutes duration. The language is fairly simple and quite straightforward. The 1st movement is peaceful and flowing , the 2nd has a dance like quality, the 3rd movement is gently lyrical and hymn like. The 4th movement is a rather folksy dance and the finale is again hymn like with the 1st phrase virtually identical to the well known hymn tune ‘Duke Street’ (Fight the good fight). This symphony is similar in soundworld to his 4th and 5th symphonies. A slight but pleasant work.
Irving Fine completed his only symphony shortly before is death at the age of 47 from a heart attack. The symphony is in 3 movements and is of about 23 minutes duration. The movements are entitled; Intrada, Capriccio & Ode and seems to herald a further development of Fine’s style, which was sadly to be prevented by his untimely death. The 1st movement is intense and serious in tone. The central movement is a powerful and exciting scherzo full of energy. Fine’s music is at times rather heavily under the influence of Stravinsky, and this is particularly apparent in the 3rd and final movement, which at times could be mistaken for the work of that Master. Fine’s language has a certain neo-classicism and there are signs of a toughening of language in this work.
Benjamin Frankel’s 2nd Symphony is a three movement work of about 35 minutes duration. The 1st movement is rich in atmosphere with a hazy daydream feel to it but with a strange underlying unease. This unease comes to the fore in the strange enigmatic central movement with its restless undercurrent and grotesque march like centre. The finale is again slow and atmospheric though in this case distinctly nocturnal in feel. Frankel uses a distinct language which is described as tonal serialism. A strange and rather hypnotic score that could perhaps have done with greater contrast.
Roy Harris complete two symphonies in 1962. The 8th Symphony plays continuously for about 15 minutes and is in five parts. Commissioned for the 50th Anniversary of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra is takes the life of St Francis as its inspiration. Harris had only recently complete an ecstatic setting of St Francis’s Canticle of the Sun for coloratura soprano & chamber orchestra (an astonishing work still awaiting a commercial recording). Harris uses some material from this work in the symphony. The symphony is one of Harris’s lightest and swiftest scores with a concertante part for solo amplified piano in the 4th & 5th parts and there is some imaginative and very individual writing in what is among the more successful of Harris’s later scores.
Harris’s 9th Symphony is in 3 movements and lasts about 30 minutes. Superficially it follows the model of his 5th Symphony with a short 1st movement, a chorale and a triple fugue finale. The 1st movement is very flexible with a swift pulse and rapid changes of texture but is basically in sonata form. The 2nd movement is among Harris’s finest movements. Unlike the optimistic chorale of the 5th Symphony this movement is heavy with sadness, beginning and a rather plaintive manner and finally reaching and anguished almost neurotic climax before coming to a shuddering conclusion. The finale takes the three subjects of the finale of his Symphony for Voices as the basis for the three subjects of the fugue. As usual with Harris the fugue isn’t strict more a mixture of fugue and variation. Harris does rather overdo things towards the end and the overblown coda is perhaps unnecessary as the symphony could have ended more successfully a few bars earlier.
Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s 8th & final symphony is a two movement work of about 25 minutes duration. The two movements flow in to one another. The first ‘cantilene’ is generally slow in tempo but with an impassioned central section. The 2nd movement is generally swifter with a dance-like pulse and is dramatic, driven on by distinctive percussion writing. Hartmann’s language is fairly tough but the symphony is very absorbing and the orchestration very effective and flexible, making plentiful use of chamber like textures. A very fine and fascinating symphony.
Henze’s 5th Symphony is a three movement work of about 20 minutes duration. Henze’s opera ‘Elegy for Young Lovers’ provides some of the material in this work. The 1st movement contrasts an edgy urban tension with a more lyrical one (from the opera). The central movement is really a series of short cadenzas for alto flute, viola & cor anglais against a hushed background. The finale is swift moving and dramatic at times that rounds off a powerful and very individual work.
The 2nd Symphony of Alun Hoddinott is a four movement work of about 27 minutes duration. It is a powerful and commanding score. The tense first movement is slow and in arch form with a sense of fruitless searching and striving. The 2nd movement is aggressive with fluid rhythms and is quite exciting. The 3rd movement is a dreamlike nocturne with a certain misty indistinctiveness but which reaches a grim dissonant climax. The finale is basically a scherzo & trio surrounded by an introduction and coda and creates a powerful and satisfactory conclusion. Hoddinott’s personal language is already present and the symphony is a challenging but rewarding work.
Alan Hovhaness’s 15th Symphony is a four movement work of about 20 minutes duration. It is a typical work from this composer’s pen, meditative, ritualistic, hypnotic and at times radiant. There are the usual exotic touches. Nothing special, but enjoyable and relaxing if you respond to this composer’s music.
John Joubert’s Sinfonietta is scored for classical forces of two oboes, horns, bassoons and strings. It plays continuously but is in three distinct sections. The outer movements are fairly light and quite appealing in a neo-classical manner. The central section is rather heavy going and frankly rather dull.
Malpeiro’s Sinfonia per Antigenida is in four movements and lasts about 18 minutes. It has a prominent piccolo part, which represents Antigenida, a Theban player of the ancient piffero. It is a serious and rather sombre score in which a sense of frustration can be felt. The counterpoint is often quite acerbic and the harmonies have a bite to them. It isn’t the easiest of the composer’s works to appreciate and it isn’t particularly memorable, but still worth a listen.
Pettersson’s 5th Symphony is in one continuous movement and lasts about 40 minutes. It is a typical work from this composer; dark, brooding and very intense. The symphony does reach an animated and powerful climax of anguish, but for the most part stays stuck in the same oppressive brooding atmosphere. The ear craves contrasts which never really come.
The 2nd Symphony of Quincy Porter is a four movement work of about 27 minutes duration. It was composed some 28 years after its predecessor. The sombre 1st movement is quite effective and has a powerful dissonant climax. The short scherzo is quite entertaining and witty. The 3rd movement has plenty of grave dignity without being particularly memorable. The finale contrasts a livelier idea with a sombre, sparse one, but isn’t particularly successful. Porter’s language is quite approachable, though I feel this symphony is less interesting that its predecessor.
Rautavaara’s current 4th Symphony only became part of his symphonic canon when the original 4th Symphony was withdrawn in 1986. The present work is in four movements and lasts about 16 minutes and is a serial work. It is the toughest of Rautavaara’s symphonies. Total serialism is used in the 1st and 3rd movements and this is an uncompromising score. Still the orchestration is very effective and helps to create a certain atmosphere.
Continued in the posting below.....
1962
Brian: Symphony No 20 in C sharp minor
Cowell: Symphony No 16 ‘Icelandic’
Fine: Symphony 1962
Frankel: Symphony No 2
Harris: Symphony No 8 ‘San Francisco’
Harris: Symphony No 9
K A Hartmann: Symphony No 8
Henze: Symphony No 5
Hoddinott: Symphony No 2
Hovhaness: Symphony No 15 ‘Silver Pilgrimage’
Joubert: Sinfonietta
Malipiero: Sinfonia per Antigenida
Pettersson: Symphony No 5
Q Porter: Symphony No 2
Rautavaara: Symphony No 4 ‘Arabescata’
Schuman: Symphony No 8
Searle: Symphony No 4
Shebalin: Symphony No 5
Shostakovich: Symphony No 13 in B flat minor ‘Babi Yar’
R Simpson: Symphony No 3
Skulte: Symphony No 3
Vainberg/Weinberg: Symphony No 5
Williamson: Symphony for Voices
Havergal Brian’s 20th Symphony is a three movement work of about 26 minutes duration and is IMO, one of the finest of Brian’s later symphonies. The first movement is restless and exploratory with a fairly muscular 1st subject and a more lyrical 2nd subject. The central movement is very expressive and haunting and among Brian’s best with real emotional depth. The finale is basically a Rondo in which an exuberant coda ends the symphony is a mood of triumph. An absorbing and rewarding symphony.
Cowell’s 16th Symphony is a five movement work of around 25b minutes duration. The language is fairly simple and quite straightforward. The 1st movement is peaceful and flowing , the 2nd has a dance like quality, the 3rd movement is gently lyrical and hymn like. The 4th movement is a rather folksy dance and the finale is again hymn like with the 1st phrase virtually identical to the well known hymn tune ‘Duke Street’ (Fight the good fight). This symphony is similar in soundworld to his 4th and 5th symphonies. A slight but pleasant work.
Irving Fine completed his only symphony shortly before is death at the age of 47 from a heart attack. The symphony is in 3 movements and is of about 23 minutes duration. The movements are entitled; Intrada, Capriccio & Ode and seems to herald a further development of Fine’s style, which was sadly to be prevented by his untimely death. The 1st movement is intense and serious in tone. The central movement is a powerful and exciting scherzo full of energy. Fine’s music is at times rather heavily under the influence of Stravinsky, and this is particularly apparent in the 3rd and final movement, which at times could be mistaken for the work of that Master. Fine’s language has a certain neo-classicism and there are signs of a toughening of language in this work.
Benjamin Frankel’s 2nd Symphony is a three movement work of about 35 minutes duration. The 1st movement is rich in atmosphere with a hazy daydream feel to it but with a strange underlying unease. This unease comes to the fore in the strange enigmatic central movement with its restless undercurrent and grotesque march like centre. The finale is again slow and atmospheric though in this case distinctly nocturnal in feel. Frankel uses a distinct language which is described as tonal serialism. A strange and rather hypnotic score that could perhaps have done with greater contrast.
Roy Harris complete two symphonies in 1962. The 8th Symphony plays continuously for about 15 minutes and is in five parts. Commissioned for the 50th Anniversary of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra is takes the life of St Francis as its inspiration. Harris had only recently complete an ecstatic setting of St Francis’s Canticle of the Sun for coloratura soprano & chamber orchestra (an astonishing work still awaiting a commercial recording). Harris uses some material from this work in the symphony. The symphony is one of Harris’s lightest and swiftest scores with a concertante part for solo amplified piano in the 4th & 5th parts and there is some imaginative and very individual writing in what is among the more successful of Harris’s later scores.
Harris’s 9th Symphony is in 3 movements and lasts about 30 minutes. Superficially it follows the model of his 5th Symphony with a short 1st movement, a chorale and a triple fugue finale. The 1st movement is very flexible with a swift pulse and rapid changes of texture but is basically in sonata form. The 2nd movement is among Harris’s finest movements. Unlike the optimistic chorale of the 5th Symphony this movement is heavy with sadness, beginning and a rather plaintive manner and finally reaching and anguished almost neurotic climax before coming to a shuddering conclusion. The finale takes the three subjects of the finale of his Symphony for Voices as the basis for the three subjects of the fugue. As usual with Harris the fugue isn’t strict more a mixture of fugue and variation. Harris does rather overdo things towards the end and the overblown coda is perhaps unnecessary as the symphony could have ended more successfully a few bars earlier.
Karl Amadeus Hartmann’s 8th & final symphony is a two movement work of about 25 minutes duration. The two movements flow in to one another. The first ‘cantilene’ is generally slow in tempo but with an impassioned central section. The 2nd movement is generally swifter with a dance-like pulse and is dramatic, driven on by distinctive percussion writing. Hartmann’s language is fairly tough but the symphony is very absorbing and the orchestration very effective and flexible, making plentiful use of chamber like textures. A very fine and fascinating symphony.
Henze’s 5th Symphony is a three movement work of about 20 minutes duration. Henze’s opera ‘Elegy for Young Lovers’ provides some of the material in this work. The 1st movement contrasts an edgy urban tension with a more lyrical one (from the opera). The central movement is really a series of short cadenzas for alto flute, viola & cor anglais against a hushed background. The finale is swift moving and dramatic at times that rounds off a powerful and very individual work.
The 2nd Symphony of Alun Hoddinott is a four movement work of about 27 minutes duration. It is a powerful and commanding score. The tense first movement is slow and in arch form with a sense of fruitless searching and striving. The 2nd movement is aggressive with fluid rhythms and is quite exciting. The 3rd movement is a dreamlike nocturne with a certain misty indistinctiveness but which reaches a grim dissonant climax. The finale is basically a scherzo & trio surrounded by an introduction and coda and creates a powerful and satisfactory conclusion. Hoddinott’s personal language is already present and the symphony is a challenging but rewarding work.
Alan Hovhaness’s 15th Symphony is a four movement work of about 20 minutes duration. It is a typical work from this composer’s pen, meditative, ritualistic, hypnotic and at times radiant. There are the usual exotic touches. Nothing special, but enjoyable and relaxing if you respond to this composer’s music.
John Joubert’s Sinfonietta is scored for classical forces of two oboes, horns, bassoons and strings. It plays continuously but is in three distinct sections. The outer movements are fairly light and quite appealing in a neo-classical manner. The central section is rather heavy going and frankly rather dull.
Malpeiro’s Sinfonia per Antigenida is in four movements and lasts about 18 minutes. It has a prominent piccolo part, which represents Antigenida, a Theban player of the ancient piffero. It is a serious and rather sombre score in which a sense of frustration can be felt. The counterpoint is often quite acerbic and the harmonies have a bite to them. It isn’t the easiest of the composer’s works to appreciate and it isn’t particularly memorable, but still worth a listen.
Pettersson’s 5th Symphony is in one continuous movement and lasts about 40 minutes. It is a typical work from this composer; dark, brooding and very intense. The symphony does reach an animated and powerful climax of anguish, but for the most part stays stuck in the same oppressive brooding atmosphere. The ear craves contrasts which never really come.
The 2nd Symphony of Quincy Porter is a four movement work of about 27 minutes duration. It was composed some 28 years after its predecessor. The sombre 1st movement is quite effective and has a powerful dissonant climax. The short scherzo is quite entertaining and witty. The 3rd movement has plenty of grave dignity without being particularly memorable. The finale contrasts a livelier idea with a sombre, sparse one, but isn’t particularly successful. Porter’s language is quite approachable, though I feel this symphony is less interesting that its predecessor.
Rautavaara’s current 4th Symphony only became part of his symphonic canon when the original 4th Symphony was withdrawn in 1986. The present work is in four movements and lasts about 16 minutes and is a serial work. It is the toughest of Rautavaara’s symphonies. Total serialism is used in the 1st and 3rd movements and this is an uncompromising score. Still the orchestration is very effective and helps to create a certain atmosphere.
Continued in the posting below.....
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