- Symphony No. 3 (Brahms)
The Symphony No. 3 in F major, Op.90, is a
symphony written byJohannes Brahms . The work was written in the summer of 1883 atWiesbaden , nearly six years after he completed his Second Symphony. In the interim Brahms had written some of his greatest masterpieces, including the Violin Concerto, two overtures ("Tragic Overture " and "Academic Festival Overture "), and the Second Piano Concerto.The premiere performance was given on December 2, 1883 by the
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra , under the direction of Hans Richter. A typical performance lasts about 40 minutes.Instrumentation
The symphony is scored for two
flute s, twooboe s, twoclarinet s, twobassoon s, onecontrabassoon , fourhorn s, twotrumpet s, threetrombone s,timpani , and strings.Form
The symphony is in four movements, marked as follows:
#Allegro con brio (F major)
#Andante (C major)
# Poco allegretto (C minor)
# Allegro (F minor, ending in F major)History
Hans Richter, who conducted the premier of the symphony, proclaimed it to be Brahms' "Eroica". The symphony was well received, more so than his Second Symphony. Although
Richard Wagner had died earlier that year, the public feud between Brahms and Wagner had not yet subsided. Fanatical members of the Wagner cult tried to interfere with the symphony's premiere, and the conflict between the two factions nearly brought about a duel.Leonard Burkat; liner notes for the 1998 recording (William Steinberg, conductor; Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra; MCA Classics)]After each performance, Brahms polished his score further, until it was published in May 1884. His friend and influential music critic
Eduard Hanslick said, "Many music lovers will prefer the titanic force of the First Symphony; others, the untroubled charm of the Second, but the Third strikes me as being artistically the most nearly perfect."Musical elements
A musical motto consisting of three notes, F–A-flat–F, was significant to Brahms. In 1853 his friend
Joseph Joachim had taken as his motto "Free, but Lonely", in German, "Frei aber einsam", and from the notes represented by the first letters of these words, F–A–E, the two musicians had jointly fabricated a Violin Sonata. At the time of the Third Symphony, Brahms is a fifty-year-old bachelor who declares himself to be "Frei aber froh", "Free but Happy". His F–A–F motto, and some altered variations of it, can be heard throughout the symphony.At the beginning of the symphony the motto is the melody of the first three measures, and it is the bass line underlying the main theme in the next three. The motto persists, either boldy or disguised, as the melody or accompaniment throughout the movement. The third movement takes the place of the conventional, fast-paced
scherzo . The finale is a lyrical, passionate movement, rich in melody that is intensely exploited, altered, and developed. The movement ends with reference to the motto heard in the first movement, then fades away to a quiet ending.References in popular culture
A theme from the third movement appeared in the film "Aimez vous Brahms?" directed by
Anatole Litvak , as well as theBBC documentary "The Century of the Self " byAdam Curtis . The melody appears in several works ofpopular music , including "Baby Alone in Babylone" bySerge Gainsbourg , "Love of My Life" on Carlos Santana's album "Supernatural", and in the final instrumental track of the album "A Glorious Lethal Euphoria" by thesurf-rock bandThe Mermen . It also is very similar toBranford Marsalis ' "The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born" on the album of the same name.References
* Walter Frisch. "Brahms: The Four Symphonies" New Haven: Yale University Press (2003): 91 - 114
External links
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