- Symphony No. 6 (Simpson)
The Symphony No. 6 by Robert Simpson was completed in 1977 and dedicated to the renowned gynaecologist
Ian Craft . It was commissioned by theLondon Philharmonic Orchestra who gave the premiere underSir Charles Groves on 8th of April, 1980.Ian Craft, the
symphony dedicatee, suggested that the emergence of life from a fertilized cell could be paralleled in symphonic form, with motives developing by thematic metamorphosis. This idea appealed to Simpson who took it even further by dividing the one-movement work into two parts: the first a steady build up to an enormous climax which symbolises birth, the second representing the rapid growth of the newly-born individual.At the beginning, two germinal elements are exposed; static and mobile. These include triadic shapes in the violins, and a chord which has potential to open out into a chain of fifths which Simpson likened to a DNA molecule. The material is always growing and proliferating into polyphonic lines, canons, inversions and retrogrades which representing cells dividing, multiplying and grouping. Eventually a central climax is reached after graphical ‘contractions’ from the orchestra; this represents the moment of birth and brings about an unspeakable sense of release.
The second half of the work symbolises the rapid development of the new-born and suggests the sequence of an intermezzo, scherzo and finale. After a long oboe tune, there is a quiet fugue before a triumphant and energetic conclusion. The work ends triadically (an unusual occurrence in Simpson’s music) on a resounding D major chord.
Discography
Currently, the only commercially available CD is a
Hyperion Records release which also includes Symphony No. 7, both performed by theRoyal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra conducted byVernon Handley . [Andrew Jacksons, " [http://members.aol.com/dmlovelock/simpson_recordings.htm Recordings and Reviews of Simpson's Works] . Accessed 4 March 2008]References
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