The music concludes with an almighty theme enhanced by the side drum, leading to a dramatic finish.I attended the Met’s first production in 1999 and left with a sense of a powerful and idiomatic American opera not yet crisply or fully realized. Perhaps the most intricate movement of the five, the finale is bursting with angular rhythms, bold unison playing and virtuosic solo lines. Intricate interludes between the different sections of the orchestra ensue, with the strings bounding off with a quick-paced theme. The final movement of the Fourth Symphony opens with a call and response figure between the strings and brass. “In making the last movement I thought of the wonderful Emily Dickinson line, “After great pain, a formal feeling comes”.” As it began, this movement finishes quietly. Harbison’s string writing here is bold and solid in technique and presentation, and this subsequently leads to an almighty climax section that is both thrilling, but also reserved. The woodwind and brass subtly accompany as the theme is drawn out across the movement. The lyrical fourth movement is chiefly led by the strings with a rich and broad melody. The movement concludes with a percussion interlude. A theme played in unison by the strings dominates the last minute of music, as Harbison’s hard work begins to pay off. As the tempo picks up near the end of the movement, the thrill of the music becomes much more prominent. Waves of tranquility lay between the chaotic scherzo theme, giving the listening a real feast for the ears. Harbison utilises the woodwind and percussion the most in this movement, with intricate writing and clever harmonic language dominating his style. The bassoons lead the opening statement of the theme. “A third constellation, reasserts the healthy energies of the first section, two games of play with simple rhythms, surrounding a reflective island.” A small reprise to the opening theme closes this atmospheric movement. The tempo throughout is reserved which builds the intensity of the music throughout. Harbison chooses instruments with very different timbres to create a unique sequence of themes. A mysterious sounding chain of soloists take over, starting with a French horn. Harbison employs the tuned percussion and harp in abundance in this movement, as their glistening textures accompany soloists throughout. “The second “movement” questions these certainties – mysterious bell-sounds, pauses, long spun-out circling string solos, and a concluding recessional, a brief tambeau for Stravinsky (set on a Venetian canal.)”Īn opening creeping theme opens the Intermezzo movement. This short opening movement concludes with a flute flourish. As Harbison layers the textures together, the opening theme blossoms into fruition as the rich harmony sings out. The jaunty string theme is passed to the woodwind who jest with the other sections with this memorable theme. Harbison’s distribution of dissonance creates intrigue in the music which is then carried through the rest of the symphony. The bombastic opening fanfare is full of colour and energy. This piece began (as it begins) with a brash fanfare answered by solo instruments in a more informal friendly conversation.” “ In working on a large piece I often begin by following the strongest impulses that present themselves, independently, until they begin to form a large, inter-dependent design. Harbison makes good use of a large orchestra, calling on a number of percussionists and brass players. Its early completion, far ahead now of the rest of the piece, affected the character of the whole symphony, especially the last movement, whose ritual formality embraces the frantic dance and march which attempt to modify its character.”Ĭast into five movements, the Fourth Symphony lasts c.28 minutes in duration. This “Threnody” is not about loss but about the imminence and inevitability of loss at times we of course do not choose. had composed in every detail the fourth movement, which (perhaps superstitiously) I have not subsequently revised. Other action temporarily impossible, I went to work and by eleven A.M. I cannot describe the knowledge that struck during that call except to say that the breath of mortality, bearing at this moment on the person closest to me, came suddenly and radically near. “One morning at eight, in Bogliasco, Italy, where I was working, I received a phone call – two o’clock the caller’s time. Harbison was very detailed in his programme notes, shedding light on the difficult time he was having personally: The work was premiered in Seattle in June 2004 by the Seattle Symphony, with Gerard Schwarz at the helm. American composer John Harbison composed his Fourth Symphony in 2003 after a commission from the Seattle Symphony came through.
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