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Novello, 1942
Ulster
Orch., Handley (1987, CD)
New Philharmonia of London,
Sir Adrian Boult,
Lyrita SRCS 70
(1975, LP)
English Sinfonia,
Neville Dilkes
(1973, LP)
Hallé Orch,
Leslie Heward,
(1942, 78s, reissued on Dutton CDAX 8001)
W H Mellers' attack
Live exclusive
recording
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Symphony Sleevenotes
Moeran's own sleevenotes from
the HMV recording of the Symphony released in 1943:
This symphony was completed early
in 1937 and received its first performance at a Royal Philharmonic
Society concert at Queen's Hall, London on 13th January 1938 under
the conductorship of Leslie Heward. It may be said to owe its inspiration
to the natural surroundings in which it was planned and written.
The greater part of the work was carried out among the mountains
and seaboard of Co. Kerry, but the material of the second movement
was conceived around the sand-dunes and marshes of East Norfolk.
It is not 'programme music'- i.e. there is no story or sequence
of events attached to it and, moreover, it adheres strictly to its
form. It is scored for a moderate sized orchestra (double wood-wind).
I Allegro.
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From the 1973 recording
by Neville Dilkes and the English Sinfonietta, the opening
of the first movement:
Allegro
(1'01")
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The Symphony opens without any preamble
with the principal subject of the first movement, given out by the
violins. In the fourth bar of this there is a figure of four semiquavers
which subsequently plays an important part. Special notice may be
taken of the downward leaps at the end of the theme. Presently there
appears a fanfare-like motive on the horns, with which is combined
the first subject fortissimo on strings. This very soon reaches
a slight climax, ending with the downward leap. The music gradually
quietens and slows down, a good deal being heard of the semiquaver
figure, and we arrive in B major for the second subject. This is
a long-drawn-out tune of lyrical character. It continues unbroken
almost to the double bar, just previous to which part of the first
subject is alluded to on solo violin and horn.
The development is ushered in by
the semiquaver figure on a clarinet. The tempo becomes Allegro molto,
the pace is set by a rhythmic figure on the strings, over which
the semiquaver figure, now inverted, is treated at some length on
the wood-wind, later in combination with the first subject in augmentation
on bassoons and horns. There is a big climax leading to what amounts
to the return and recapitulation. This is brief and quiet, the component
parts of the first and second subjects and the horn fanfare being
dovetailed in succession contrapuntally.
A lengthy coda concludes the movement,
during which the rhythmic figure from the double bar assumes importance
on the brass, and the inverted semi-quaver figure now augmented
to crotchets is further developed by a solo horn over string accompaniment.
11 Lento.
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From a concert given in 2001 by the Shrewsbury Symphony Orchestra
- the complete work to download in quality MP3:
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Here
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The slow movement, which is in B minor,
is based entirely on four motives which are given out at the start
in quick succession. The first is an undulating one on cellos and
basses, the second follows immediately on low flutes and bassoons,
the third in canon on all four wood-wind sections, and finally a
three-bar motive on divided cellos. The foregoing material occupies
the first seventeen bars. These four motives are subsequently developed
and combined in various ways until the second of them gradually
attains final supremacy in what may be described as a variation
of it in the form of a broad twelve-bar melody, appearing unostentatiously
first of all on cellos and basses against running thirds on the
wood-wind. This is repeated on violas, cellos and horn, a climax
is led up to by the fourth motive, in which the first is thundered
out by brass and wood-wind in combination with the tail-end of the
second on drums and brass instruments. The music quietens, and once
more the broad melodic variation of the second motive comes back
into its own, played by the upper strings with the first motive
in the bass. The movement closes with a brief glimpse of the third
motive on the clarinets.
III Vivace.
The key is D major, the sunlight is
let in, and there is a spring-like contrast to the wintry proceedings
of the slow movement. The construction is so simple that detailed
analysis would be superfluous. The main ingredients are the long
oboe tune with which the movement commences, and the subsequent
broader melody for strings with its appendage of a dancing or, more
truly, jumping motive on wood-wind instruments. Eventually, a burst
of sharp crescendo chords on the brass leads up to a sudden brief
climax, after which the first oboe is left over and hangs on to
recall a fragment of his original subject over mysterious murmurings
on muted violas and cellos, and the movement comes to an end, 'snuffed
out', as it were, by a passing cloud.
IV Lento - Allegro molto.
The Finale is preceded by a slow introduction
of twenty-four bars in which the downward leap from the beginning
of the Symphony is much in evidence. The germ of the second subject
of the Finale is heard on the horns and there is a serene and peaceful
melody on the strings which provides complete contrast to the sudden
wild mood of the ensuing Allegro molto.
Here the tempo becomes a quick three-in-a-bar,
and violas give out the first subject proper, which is in the rhythm
of a triple jig. This is worked up to a climax on all the strings,
underneath which the trombones come in with a short passage of sharp
rising chords of the sixth, at the close of which the downward leap
appears for the last time, to be swept aside by the subsidiary first
subject. This is a soaring motive on violins and violas treated
canonically with its second half on cellos, bases and tuba, which
last-mentioned instrument now makes its first appearance in the
Symphony.
A rhythmic bridge passage makes way
for a climax in which the jig-like first subject is heard in two
forms of augmentation, first on horns against staccato chords and
then further stretched out on trombones against rushing scales on
the strings and wind. Another climax heralds the second subject,
given out on oboes and bassoon over a monotonous pedal figure on
drums, harp and basses. This alternates with a broad, march-like
theme for strings and an attendant canon for horns and basses, but
eventually tails off on violins and violas, the concluding harmonic
progression forming the germ on which is built up a long, rushing
string passage. Over this appears first the jig-like tune, then
a persistent development of the subsidiary first subject, which
now assumes ascendancy. Presently the second subject makes several
tentative experiments and eventually, after what has been a combination
of working out and return from preceding material, appears in its
final recapitulatory position, now in seven-four time.
The tempo slackens and the coda or,
more properly, the epilogue, takes place for forty bars, all of
which, except the last two, are on the tonic pedal of G.
Here there is quiet retrospection
of the march-like theme on the violas, introduced by its attendant
canon on the upper wood-wind. The semiquaver figure from the first
movement is recalled in its inverted form, a final crescendo leads
to the conclusion, and the Symphony ends with a series of six crashing
chords.
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"It may be said to owe its inspiration
to the natural surroundings in which it was planned and written"
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