Brahms: Symphony No.4

Johannes Brahms (1913-1994)

Symphony No.4 in E minor, Op.98

  1. Allegro non troppo
  2. Andante moderato
  3. Allegro giocoso
  4. Allegro energico e passionato

Brahms famously took 20 years to complete his first symphony, so intimidated was he by the example of Beethoven. Having broken his duck, however, he produced a second within a year. His third and fourth symphonies likewise emerged within a short space of each other. In June 1884, the year after the composition and première of the Third Symphony, Brahms sent a hint to his publisher Simrock in the form of a local newspaper cutting announcing Brahms’s arrival in the Austrian mountain town of Mürzzuschlag. The composer was there, the paper assured its readers, to work on “a major new piece.” In a further letter in August Brahms casually mentioned that “I appear to be taking better paper with more staves on it.” The holiday in Mürzzuschlag and the quality manuscript paper were signs of the genesis of his Fourth Symphony.


Brahms was self-critical at the best of times, but the emerging work seemed to worry him more than usual. Writing to the conductor Hans von Bülow, he described it as “a pair of Entr’actes, such as one commonly calls a symphony... I’m afraid it tastes of the climate here; the cherries never ripen in these parts - you wouldn’t want to eat them!” Brahms’s insecurity as to how palatable the new symphony reflected the pressure of high expectations; the Third Symphony had been received with an unanimous enthusiasm not seen since his German Requiem in 1869.


The roots of the Fourth Symphony can be traced back to before he had written his third. In 1882 Brahms discussed Bach’s Cantata No. 150 “Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich” [Unto thee Oh Lord do I lift up my soul] with von Bülow, and in particular its last movement, which is a chaconne - a set of variations over a repeating bass line. “What would you think about a symphony written on this theme some time?” Brahms pondered. “But it is too clumsy, too straightforward. One would have to alter it chromatically in some way.” A version of this theme, altered in precisely the manner Brahms suggests, underpins the finale of the Fourth.


He returned to Mürzzuschlag the following summer, where he completed the new symphony. He sent a copy to his friend Elisabeth von Herzogenberg, accompanied by a worried note: “In general, and unfortunately, my pieces are nicer than I am, and people find less in them to correct?! But round here the cherries do not ripen, do not become edible – if the item doesn't taste good to you, don't be embarrassed; I'm not at all keen to write a bad number 4.” Herzogenberg was normally an unabashed cheerleader for Brahms’ music, but on this occasion she confessed to some doubts about its accessibility: “The symphony is too cerebral”, she said; “it makes the listener or score reader work too hard: We feel we should like to fold our hands and shut our eyes and be stupid for once, leaning on the composer to rest, instead of his driving us so relentlessly afield.”


In Vienna in October, Brahms and his fellow composer Ignaz Brüll performed the symphony in a piano arrangement for a select audience of supporters. Here too, however, the reaction was more muted than he might have hoped: the critic Eduard Hanslick confessed after the first movement, “For the whole movement I had the feeling that I was being given a beating by two incredibly intelligent people!”


In the event, the first performances were successful, and it is now recognised as one of Brahms’ greatest achievements. The opening movement that so unnerved Hanslick begins almost nonchalantly, although right from the outset there is a sense of a tightly controlled and concentrated structure developing, even as the emotional turmoil gradual comes to the surface. From the opening bars Brahms’s obsessive reworking of tiny motifs to create larger themes suggests the kind of close-knit variations that will emerge in the finale. A contrasting second theme has a quality memorably characterised by Leonard Bernstein as “a kind of strange tango”, which if not a historically accurate description certainly evokes the combination of nobility and tragedy that it projects. The second movement provides a complete contrast: a strident horn call transforms into a tentative, withdrawn melody, floating over a gentle tread of plucked strings. The overall warmth is nevertheless tinged with melancholy.


Daylight bursts out in the third movement, which is perhaps the most boisterous and unbuttoned movement in all Brahms’ symphonies. In its jubilant air (subtly enhanced by the introduction of a triangle) it feels almost like a finale; in fact it takes on some of the function of a finale in resolving much of the tension built up by the previous two movements.


The slate is thus cleared for the actual finale, which is quite simply one of the most extraordinary things Brahms ever wrote. In digging deep into the past, both in his refashioning of an idea from Bach, and through his use of archaic techniques, Brahms in fact creates something new and unprecedented in symphonic writing. Rather than Bach’s Chaconne structure, Brahms presents a Passacaglia - the same principle of variations over a repeated line, except that the line in question may appears in registers other than the bass. The theme (in which the trombones make their first appearance) is followed by 30 variations. These are organised into a three-part structure that mirrors the previous three movements, with a slow and reflective central section contrasting with faster outer sections. When the final climax bursts through though, it is not in the jubilant major of the third movement, but a stern minor key. The rigid pattern that the music is built on only serves to heighten the tension, until in the closing pages it finally breaks free of its strictures. It remains sternly in the minor to its close, but is too full of fire and energy to be tragic.

Tippett: Concerto for Double String Orchestra

Michael Tippett (1905-1998)

Concerto for Double String Orchestra

  1. 1 Allegro con brio
  2. 2 Adagio cantabile
  3. 3 Allegro con brio

Tippett’s apprenticeship as a composer was a long one. Having decided at school that he wanted to be a composer, he entered the Royal College of Music in 1923. However, his distinctive voice only emerged as the result of prolonged effort. It was not until the Concerto for Double String Orchestra, composed in 1938, that he found his distinctive voice as a composer.


The use of folk material is not intended to create any cosy sense of nostalgia; rather it is a reflection of Tippett’s deep humanitarianism, and faith in the ability of a vital tradition to renew itself. Tippett was deeply suspicious of the school of composers that had gathered around Vaughan Williams and had set himself against it. His wider perspective is reflected in the rhythm and harmony, which draw much from the jazz and blues that captivated the young Tippett as so many of his generation. Aaron Copland, on hearing the Concerto for the first time on the radio, assumed that it must be the work of an American.


The term “concerto” is used here in its earlier, Baroque sense of a group playing together rather than the “virtuoso soloist and orchestra” model that it generally refers to today. The two orchestras into which Tippett divides the strings act in tandem rather than opposition. This can be heard clearly in the opening movement, where the melody is passed between the two groups, who answer and imitate each other in a manner reminiscent of Renaissance and early Baroque composers such as Gabrielli and Monteverdi.


The slow movement is a richly lyrical affair, whose languid melodies owe as much to the blues singing of artists such as Bessie Smith as to the string quartet by Beethoven on which it is modelled. The finale builds on the rhythmic playfulness of the opening, and uses a Northumbrian pipe tune to bring the work to a luxuriant close built of intertwining melodic lines.


Tippett conducted the first performance of the Concerto at Morley College in 1940, the same year that he joined the Peace Pledge Union. When the Concerto was performed at the Wigmore Hall in 1943, the Conscientious Objectors’ Bulletin reported, “circumstances beyond his control prevented the composer attending.” The circumstances were that Tippett had refused to undertake full-time fire service or land work as a condition of his status as a conscientious objector. His argument, backed up by no less a figure than Vaughan Williams as witness, was that his most constructive contribution to society was through music. The argument fell on deaf ears, and he was imprisoned for three months.
Vaughan Williams’ willingness to stand up for Tippett was an exceptionally generous act, which began a softening of Tippett’s opinion of him. In later years he admitted that he only came to realise after the elder composer’s death that it was “Vaughan-Williams, rather than any other of his contemporaries, who had made us free.”

Berlioz: Béatrice et Bénédict Overture

Hector Berlioz (1803-1869)

Overture: Béatrice et Bénédict


Berlioz spent most of the 1850s composing and attempting unsuccessfully to secure a production of his epic opera Les Troyens. The strain took its toll, and by 1858 he was showing the first signs of the intestinal illness that would eventually kill him. At the same time, following his divorce from the actress and inspiration for the Symphonie fantastique, Harriet Smithson, he remarried. His second wife, Marie Recio, died suddenly in June 1862, a few months after he completed what would prove to be his last opera, Béatrice et Bénédict.
 
Béatrice, in contrast to Les Troyens, quickly secured a performance and was unveiled in August 1862 in Baden-Baden. Ever the perfectionist, Berlioz found much to vex him in the production, from his difficulties in persuading the musicians to play quietly enough to the inadequate size of the orchestra pit, but despite all this the production was a success. Berlioz conducted it himself, despite his advancing illness, and later remarked that his conducting, which in his earlier years had been criticised for its indiscipline, was greatly improved by his health; the pain forced him to be “less excitable.”

If Les Troyens is Berlioz’s self-consciously grand, tragic magnum opus, then Béatrice et Bénédict is in character its polar opposite, an effervescent, exuberant comedy whose wit and lightness of touch belies the pain he was in as he wrote. The libretto, written by Berlioz himself, is an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing. (Some commentators have suggested, somewhat unkindly, that Berlioz’s adaptation amounts to “Much Ado About Nothing without the Ado.”) Berlioz’s fascination with Shakespeare was a recurring obsession throughout his career, and it is entirely fitting that a Shakespeare based work should prove to be his swansong.

Opera overtures at this time tended to be pot-pourris of themes from the ensuing drama. Berlioz here weaves together themes from six arias and ensemble pieces from the opera, but with rather more care than most of his contemporaries. The result is a satisfying and coherent piece that has found a regular home in the concert hall.