Symphony No. 2 (Nielsen)

Symphony No. 2 (Nielsen)

The "Symphony No. 2 "The Four Temperaments"" (Op. 16, FS 29) is the second symphony by Danish composer Carl Nielsen written in 1901 to 1902 and dedicated to Ferruccio Busoni. It was first performed in 1 December 1902 for the Danish Concert Association, with the composer himself conducting. As indicated in the subtitle, each of its four movements is a musical sketch of a humour of the four temperaments: choleric, phlegmatic, melancholic, and sanguine. Despite its apparent concept of program music, the work is a fully integrated symphony in traditional symphonic structure.

Its movements and their respective temperament illustrated are as followed:
#Allegro collerico (Choleric)
#Allegro comodo e flemmatico (Phlegmatic)
#Andante malincolico (Melancholic)
#Allegro sanguineo - Marziale (Sanguine)Notice that the composer misspelt the word "malinconico" as "malincolico" in the third movement.

The composer's inspiration for the symphony came from a four-part comical picture of "the temperaments" in a village pub in Zealand during a visit with his wife and friends. In his account of the symphony, Nielsen gave a detailed outline of his vision for each temperament in each of his four movements. For example, in the phlegmatic temperament of the second movement, the composer visualized a young teenager who is loved by all:

His real inclination was to lie where the birds sing, where the fish glide noiselessly through the water, where the sun warms and the wind strokes mildly round one's curls. He was fair; his expression was rather happy, but not self-compacent, rather with a hint of quiet melancholy, so that one felt impelled to be good to him... I have never seen him dance; he wasn't active enough for that, though he might easily have got the idea to swing himself in a gentle slow waltz rhythm, so I have used that for the movement, "Allegro comodo e flemmatico", and tried to stick to one mood, as far away as possible from energy, emotionalism, and such things.

Whereas the finale symbolizes a cheerful man:

I have tried to sketch a man who storms thoughtlessly forward in the belief that the whole world belongs to him, that fried pigeons will fly into his mouth without work or bother. There is, though, a moment in which something scares him, and he gasps all at once for breath in rough syncopations: but this is soon forgotten, and even if the music turns to minor, his cheery, rather superficial nature still asserts itself.

Progressive tonality is demonstrated in the symphony; the first three movements are in descending thirds: B minor, G major, and E flat minor, and the final movement springs out the D major chord. The second symphony, as in the first, still belongs to the tradition of Brahms and Dvořák, but more compact and concentrated with simple but powerful finishing by an A major march.

References

*cite book| last = Simpson | first = Robert | authorlink = Robert Simpson (composer) | title = Carl Nielsen, Symphonist, 1865-1931 | publisher = Hyperion | date = 1989 | location = USA | page = 25-44 | isbn = 0-88355-715-0

External links

*


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Symphony No. 5 (Nielsen) — The Symphony No. 5 (Op. 50, FS 97) by Danish composer Carl Nielsen was completed on 15 January 1922 and first performed in Copenhagen on 24 January 1922 with the composer conducting. It is one of two of Nielsen s six symphonies lacking a subtitle …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony No. 1 (Nielsen) — The Symphony No. 1 in G minor (Op. 7, FS 16) is the first orchestral symphony of Danish composer Carl Nielsen. Written between 1891 and 1892, it was dedicated to his wife, Anne Marie Carl Nielsen. The work s première, on 14 March, 1894 was… …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony No. 4 (Nielsen) — The Symphony No. 4 , The Inextinguishable (Danish: Det Uudslukkelige ), by Carl Nielsen, was completed in 1916. This symphony is among the most dramatic that Nielsen wrote, featuring a battle between two sets of timpani.The title Inextinguishable …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony No. 6 (Nielsen) — The Symphony No. 6 by Carl Nielsen, written in 1925, is a work in four movements: #Tempo giusto #Humoreske: Allegretto #Proposta seria: Adagio #Tema con variazioni: AllegroIt was premiered later that year in Copenhagen with the composer… …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony No. 3 (Nielsen) — Carl Nielsen s Symphony No. 3 or Symphony Espansiva is one of Nielsen s most successful compositions and symphonies.The symphony was written over a two year span from 1910 to 1911 mdash; directly after Nielsen s tenure as bandmaster at the Royal… …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony No. 1 — is a simple designation for the first symphony published by a composer. The term applies to: Formally titled * Symphony No. 1, by William Alwyn * Symphony No. 1, by Malcolm Arnold * Symphony No. 1, by Arnold Bax * Symphony No. 1, Op. 21, by… …   Wikipedia

  • Symphony — Álbum de estudio de Sarah Brightman Publicación 28 de enero de 2008 …   Wikipedia Español

  • symphony — /sim feuh nee/, n., pl. symphonies. 1. Music. a. an elaborate instrumental composition in three or more movements, similar in form to a sonata but written for an orchestra and usually of far grander proportions and more varied elements. b. an… …   Universalium

  • Nielsen, Carl — ▪ Danish composer in full  Carl August Nielsen   born June 9, 1865, Sortelung, near Norre Lyndelse, Den. died Oct. 3, 1931, Copenhagen       violinist, conductor, and Denmark s foremost composer, particularly admired as a symphonist.… …   Universalium

  • Symphony No. 3 — Among the pieces of music with the title Symphony No. 3 are:*William Alwyn s Symphony No. 3 *Malcolm Arnold s Symphony No. 3, op. 63 *Arnold Bax s Symphony No. 3 *Henk Badings s Symphony No. 3 *Tadeusz Baird s Symphony No. 3 *Arnold Bax s… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”