BRAHMS: Symphony No. 1 / Tragic Overture / Academic Festival Overture
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Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) Symphony No. 1 in C minor Tragic Overture Academic Festival Overture Brahms's symphonic aspirations went back at least to the...
Johannes Brahms (1833-1897)
Symphony No. 1 in C minor Tragic Overture Academic Festival Overture
Brahms's symphonic aspirations went back at least to
the time when Robert Schumann in 1853 had introduced
him to the musical world in his press article 'New
Paths', in which he described Brahms's piano sonatas as
'veiled symphonies' and publicly encouraged the young
composer to write for larger forces. It took Brahms
another 23 years and several attempts which led
elsewhere before he fully came to terms with writing a
symphony 'after Beethoven', as he put matters. This is
the anxiety of influence, or perhaps better the
responsibility of influence, writ large: how to make
oneself a worthy part of a tradition one admires, how to
respond to one's chosen past with the originality and
power it ineluctably demands. During composition of
both the First Piano Concerto, Op. 15, and the First
Serenade, Op. 11, Brahms thought of each work as a
potential symphony, then in summer 1862 he showed
the first movement of the First Symphony to friends, as
yet without its slow introduction. Almost nothing is
known of his work on the symphony in the intervening
years to 1876, though for her birthday in 1868 he sent
Clara Schumann the alphorn theme used in the finale.
He titled it for her on this occasion: 'Thus the alphorn
sounded forth today', and gave it a poetic text, but, as far
as we know, melody and poem are Brahms's own. By
the beginning of the next decade he seemed to have lost
heart entirely, remarking to his friend the conductor
Hermann Levi: 'I shall never write a symphony! You
have no idea what it feels like, for someone like me
always to hear such a giant as Beethoven marching
along behind'. Brahms completed the work in October
1876, very probably in part under felt competitive
pressure from Wagner's opening of Bayreuth and
presentation of the first complete Ring Cycle. This
symphony was the only work for which Brahms fixed a
first performance before finishing the composition, and
he delivered the score in instalments to his friend Otto
Dessoff, who conducted the première on 4th November
in the Great Hall of the Museum in Karlsruhe.
That year the University of Cambridge offered
Brahms and his friend the violinist Joseph Joachim
honorary doctorates. Brahms could not bring himself to
visit England, so was unable to accept the honour.
Joachim on the other hand came, and he performed
Brahms's Symphony at Cambridge on 8th March 1877.
The early press reception in both countries was very
warm, and recurrent points of focus were: the chambermusic
aspect of the orchestral writing, speculation
concerning a possible secret programme, and the
relationship to Beethovenian heritage. This last issue
became especially important for Wagner and his
followers, for he maintained that after Beethoven's
Ninth Symphony, only the Music Drama and Symphonic
Poem could be justified in the realm of orchestral music.
Thus Brahms's competition with Wagner had its
profound side, and his achievement in this symphony
constitutes a reaffirmation and revitalization of the fourmovement
purely instrumental symphony as a traditional
form made new.
Brahms begins with a powerful slow introduction,
in which chromatic lines in woodwind and strings
diverge over relentless drum beats; this becomes a type
of pre-thematic motto for the whole work - these
sinuous chromatic lines surround the themes in the first
movement, interrupt the sumptuous opening melody of
the slow movement, punctuate the phrases of the
intermezzo-like third movement, and reach their
apotheosis in the dramatic introduction to the finale,
where they are at last dismissed by the appearance of the
alphorn melody. This evolution is emblematic of the
narrative trajectory of the work as a whole: from
darkness to light, from strenuous drama to triumphant
joy. Brahms gives this narrative an extra dimension in
the last movement: his customary practice was to write
movements which diversify out from their opening by
variation and extension; in this finale, on the other
hand, he sets out by presenting a diverse range of
material - the dark, foreboding introduction, the alphorn
theme (a nature topos, of course), the brass chorale
(an ecclesiastical topos), the march-like Allegro theme
(a Beethovenian topos) - which, during the course of the
movement, he proceeds to relate and integrate, before
closing with surely the most overtly euphoric peroration
he ever gave us, in musical (and personal) triumph.
'The Academic has seduced me into a second
overture, which at the moment I call "Dramatic Overture"
- which again doesn't please me', wrote Brahms to a
friend in August 1880, shortly after composing his Tragic
Overture. The pairing of contrasted works had been a
feature of his creativity for some time, Brahms here
describing a kind of generic 'force of attraction'. By
September he had arrived at the title 'Tragic'; he had
recently been asked to write incidental music to
Goethe's Faust (a scheme which fell through), and,
while some of the music may relate to this request,
Brahms kept his titling resolutely general.
At the outset two chords outline a melodic falling
fourth - to become a common feature in other themes
also - and their challenging harmonic ambiguity
continues into the austere modal theme following. These
chords act as marker and emblem throughout, though
they are on occasion themselves also developed, with
reinterpreted rhythm and added notes. Brahms used a
type of sonata form in which development is nested
within recapitulation: the modal theme acts as first
subject, while the second is more distinctly lyrical and
richly harmonized; development cuts the first subject to
half-speed for a slow march, with energy returning in the
brief fugato following; the coda struggles and dies,
before emphatic closure. Where then is the drama? The
sharply characterized, demonstrative, heightened nature
of the musical discourse, with varied pacing and strong
contrasts clearly embodies dramatic principles, and the
music impacts as assertive, austere, energetic, withdrawn,
mysterious, and romantic by turns. And what of the
tragic? Brahms said of his two overtures: 'one laughs, the
other weeps', but there is no specific story here, rather the
elevated nobility, the inexorable force and trajectory of
pure tragedy itself.
In March 1879 the University of Breslau awarded
Brahms an honorary doctorate, the citation describing
him as artis musicae severioris in Germania nunc
princeps (now the foremost composer of serious music
in Germany), a citation which caused Wagner real
difficulty. The Academic Festival Overture was
Brahms's artistic response to the honour, written in
summer 1880. His attitude to academia was complex: a
man of great erudition, especially in literature and
music, he did not much like theoretic or aesthetic
discourse on music, speaking harshly, for instance, of
his friend Eduard Hanslick's famous treatise On the
Beautiful in Music, yet he had enjoyed his brief youthful
taste of student life at the University of Gottingen, and
he used his new title 'Doktor' with relish.
The University had requested a 'doctoral
symphony', and Brahms's artistic response seems on the
surface like a deflating joke, a 'pot-pourri à la Suppe',
as he himself ironically described it, stringing together
student songs, one of which had words distinctly critical
of university authorities. Yet, if one listens closer, the
work reveals its more intricate side: common motifs
draw together contrasting themes, counterpoint
intensifies melody, variations bring telling changes of
expression, and an overall binary structure provides
scope for development and creates a strong sense of
logic and coherence. The Overture concludes
climactically with Gaudeamus igitur, the first
appearance of this melody in the work, though the
opening theme of the Overture proves to have been
extracted from its third line in a further example of
surface freedom supported by underlying strictness.
Thus the Overture succinctly resolves Brahms's
ambivalence to academia, setting off fun in the context
of the serious, as at once a good joke and a polished
piece of 'artis musicae severioris'.
Robert Pascall
Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 68 (more info)
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I. Un poco sostenuto - Allegro - 16:15
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II. Andante sostenuto - 9:19
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III. Un poco allegretto e grazioso - 4:48
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IV. Adagio - Allegro non troppo ma con brio - 17:18
Tragic Overture, Op. 81 (more info)
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Allegro non troppo - 14:01
Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80 (more info)
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Allegro - L'istesso tempo, un poco maestoso - Animato - Maestoso - 10:38