- Symphony No. 2 (Sibelius)
Jean Sibelius 's Symphony No. 2 in D major, Opus 43 was started in winter 1900 inRapallo ,Italy , and finished in 1902 in Finland. It was first performed by the Helsinki Philharmonic Society on8 March 1902 with the composer conducting. After the first performance, Sibelius made some revisions, and the revised version was given its first performance byArmas Järnefelt on10 November 1903 inStockholm . It is in four movements, with the third movement and the finale playedattacca :#"Allegretto - Poco allegro - Tranquillo, ma poco a poco ravvivando il tempo all'allegro - Poco largamente - Tempo I - Poco allegro"
#"Tempo andante, ma rubato - Poco allegro - Molto largamente - Andante sostenuto - Andante con moto ed energico - Allegro - Poco largamente - Molto largamente - Andante sostenuto - Andante con moto ed energico - Andante - Pesante"
#"Vivacissimo - Lento e soave - Tempo primo - Lento e soave - (attacca)"
#"Finale: Allegro moderato - Moderato assai - Meno moderato e poco a poco ravvivando il tempo - Tempo I - Largamente e pesante - Poco largamente - Molto largamente"The duration is approximately 45 minutes.
Orchestration
Sibelius scored his second for an orchestra consisting of standard instruments:
;
Woodwind :2Flute s:2Oboe s:2Clarinet s:2Bassoon s;
Brass :4 Horns:3Trumpet s:3Trombone s:Tuba ;
Percussion :Timpani ;Strings:1st and 2nd
Violin s:Viola s:Cello s:Double bass esReception
In
Finland , this popular work with its grandiose finale was connected with the struggle forFinland 's independence, even being dubbed the "Symphony of Independence" as it was written at a time of Russian sanctions on Finnish language and culture. Sibelius' reaction to this has been widely debated; some claim that he had not intended any patriotic message and was purely identified as a nationalist composer, while others believe that he wrote the piece with an independent Finland in mind.Fact|date=February 2007Tying in with Sibelius' philosophy on the art of the symphony ('The Finnish composer wrote that he "admired [the symphony's] severity of style and the profound logic that created an inner connection between all the motifs..."' [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibelius] ) The work grows almost organically out of a rising three-note motif heard at the opening of the work, which, after appearing in many guises throughout the entire symphony (and indeed forming the basis for most of the material) forms the dramatic theme of the finale.
The first recording was made by
Robert Kajanus with theLondon Symphony Orchestra for theHMV label in May 1930.External links
* [http://www.sibelius.fi/english/musiikki/ork_sinf_02.htm Article]
* [http://inkpot.com/classical/sib23bis.html Review on The Flying Inkpot]
* [http://www.deutschegrammophon.com/special/?ID=jaervi-sibelius Track listing from "Järvi conducts Sibelius"]
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