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Symphony No. 1 (Madetoja)

The Symphony No. 1 in F major, Op. 29, is a three-movement orchestral composition by the Finnish composer Leevi Madetoja, who wrote the piece from 1914–16 at the dawn of his professional career. Although late-Romantic in style, the symphony carefully eschews the extravagance and overindulgence typical of debut efforts, placing it among the most "mature" and restrained of first symphonies. Accordingly, the First is the shortest and most concentrated of Madetoja's three essays in the form and is the only one of his symphonies not to adhere to the traditional four-movement symphonic template.

Symphony No. 1
by Leevi Madetoja
The composer (c. 1915–1918)
KeyF major
Opus29
Composed1914 (1914)–1916
DedicationRobert Kajanus
DurationApprox. 22 minutes
Movements3
Premiere
Date10 February 1916 (1916-02-10)
LocationHelsinki, Finland
ConductorLeevi Madetoja
PerformersHelsinki Philharmonic Orchestra

The Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra premiered the work in Helsinki, Finland on 10 February 1916 under the composer's baton. The critics received the premiere warmly, concluding that an important symphonic talent had arrived on the Finnish music scene, the new work's echoes of Sibelius and Tchaikovsky notwithstanding.

History Edit

Despite the ongoing hostilities of World War I, Madetoja traveled to Russia in September 1914 to take up the conductorship of the Viipuri Orchestra (1914–16).[1] Madetoja found the orchestra in a state of relative devastation: he was able to piece together 19 musicians, a reality that forced him to spend much of his time finding and arranging material for such an undersized ensemble.[2] And yet, he somehow found the time to begin the biggest project of his young career: a symphony. During the composition process, which Madetoja's conducting duties repeatedly disturbed (for example, he completed the finale just before the scheduled premiere),[3] Madetoja received a letter of encouragement from Jean Sibelius, Finland's greatest symphonist (as well as Madetoja's former teacher):

What you wrote about your symphonic business delights me exceedingly. I feel that you will achieve your greatest triumphs in that genre, for I consider that you have precisely the properties that make a symphonic composer. This is my firm belief.

— Jean Sibelius, in an October 1914 letter to his former pupil[4]

Madetoja officially joined the ranks of symphonic composers on 10 February 1916; the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra premiered the new work under the composer's own baton (Robert Kajanus, the founder and chief conductor of the orchestra, was the dedicatee). Sibelius's "firm belief" indeed proved prescient, as the critics received the new work warmly; the general impression was that an important new symphonic talent had arrived. For example, the Finnish critic Evert Katila [fi] praised Madetoja's symphony in Uusi Suometar, writing, "The symphony appeals through the logic of its construction and the translucent brightness of its orchestration."[4]

Sibelius, who was in attendance, also remarked upon the symphony's beauty.[5] Nevertheless, the teacher eyed his former student's maturation somewhat wearily. For example, when some reviews of the First Symphony discerned within Madetoja's music the influence of Sibelius (for example, Karl Wasenius [fi] in Hufvudstadsbladet), he worried his former pupil might take offence at the comparison and mistook Madetoja's characteristic "melancholia" for "sulkiness".[6] Suddenly, Sibelius found Madetoja arrogant and watched with concern as he drew closer to Kajanus, with whom Sibelius had an on-again-off-again friendship/rivalry. "Met Madetoja, who—I'm sorry to say—has become pretty bumptious after his latest success," Sibelius fretted to his diary. "Kajanus smothers him with flattery and he hasn't the breeding to see it for what it is".[6]

Orchestration Edit

Structure Edit

The First Symphony is in three movements and, as such, is the only one of Madetoja's three symphonies to eschew the traditional four-movement symphonic format. The movements are as follows:

  1. Allegro
  2. Lento misterioso
  3. Finale: Allegro vivace

First movement Edit

The first movement is in traditional sonata form; the first subject—Allegro—is in F major and 3/4 time.

The "dreamy" second subject (Meno allegro), in D-flat major, is reminiscent of Tchaikovsky; relative to the first movement, it is, according to the Finnish musicologist Erkki Salmenhaara, "from a different world, an oasis of calm which brings the symphonic process to a standstill".[7]

Second movement Edit

The second movement, the slowest in tempo and the longest in duration of the three, is "redolent with a deep Finnish melancholy".[8] The first subject—Lento misterioso—consists of a dissonant, siren-like motif on flutes juxtaposed against a lugubrious solo cello, their interplay periodically interrupted by ominous interjections from the brass. Half-way through the movement, the second subject—Poco tranquillo—appears: a delicate woodwind dialogue in F-sharp minor[7] between oboe, clarinet, and flute, supported by string bass pizzicati, strings, and horns. Although this passage recalls the third movement of Sibelius's Third Symphony, it is by no means derivative; the subject is, according to Finnish musicologist Erkki Salmenhaara, "all Madetoja's own".[7] The movement ends with the return of the first subject, but modified such that solo cor anglais takes up the original cello line.

Third movement Edit

Discography Edit

Thus far, Madetoja's First Symphony has been recorded only by Nordic orchestras, usually as a component piece of a larger recording project of Madetoja's major orchestral works, such as those by Petri Sakari [fi] and the Iceland Symphony Orchestra (1991–92), Arvo Volmer and the Oulu Symphony Orchestra (1998–2006), and John Storgårds and the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra (2012–13).

Conductor Orchestra Recorded Duration Label
Petri Sakari [fi] Iceland Symphony Orchestra 1992 23:20 Chandos (CHAN 9115)
Leif Segerstam Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra 1996 25:21 Finlandia (FACD 015)
Arvo Volmer Oulu Symphony Orchestra 1999 20:07 Alba Records [fi] (ABCD 144)
John Storgårds Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra 2013 21:13 Ondine (ODE 1211-2)

In his review of the Sakari and Volmer efforts, the American Record Guide's Tom Godell applauds Madetoja for his ability to "craft beautiful, swirling rainbows of vivid color in every one of his scores," but nevertheless faults the First Symphony for is "lack of memorable themes or smooth transitions," asserting that "all too often Madetoja simply drops one idea, then abruptly moves on to the next. The result sounds more like a rough sketch than a polished final draft".[9] Fanfare's Phillip Scott, writing about Storgårds's recordings of the First and Third symphonies, describes the former as "the most Sibelian music on this disc" and praises Madetoja for having composed "three of the 20th century's loveliest symphonies".[10] The general impression of both reviewers seems to be that the Volmer and Storgårds recordings, "irrepressib[ly] vigor[ous]" and "passionate", respectively, are superior to the slower, "more laid-back" interpretation of Sakari.[9][10]

References and sources Edit

References Edit

Sources Edit

Books

  • Tawaststjerna, Erik (1997). Sibelius: Volume 3, 1914–1957. (Robert Layton, English translation). London: Faber and Faber.

CD liner notes

  • Korhonen, Kimmo (2013a). Leevi Madetoja: Symphony No. 1 and 3, Okon Fuoko Suite (booklet). John Storgårds & Helsinki Philharmonic. Helsinki, Finland: Ondine. p. 4–7. ODE1211-2.
  • Pulliainen, Riitta (2000b). Madetoja Orchestral Works 2: The Spirit Home of My Soul (booklet). Arvo Volmer & Oulu Symphony Orchestra. Tampere, Finland: Alba. p. 4–6. ABCD 144.
  • Pulliainen, Riitta (2000c). Madetoja Orchestral Works 3: The Infinity of Fantasy (booklet). Arvo Volmer & Oulu Symphony Orchestra. Tampere, Finland: Alba. p. 4–6. ABCD 156.
  • Salmenhaara, Erkki (1992b). Madetoja, L.: Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2 (booklet). Petri Sakari & Iceland Symphony Orchestra. Colchester, England: Chandos. p. 4–6. CHAN 9115.

Websites

  • Korhonen, Kimmo. "Leevi Madetoja in Profile". madetoja.org/en. Retrieved January 29, 2016.

Journal articles

  • Godell, Tom (2001). "Madetoja: Symphony 1; Concert Overture; Pastoral Suite; Rustic Scenes". American Record Guide. 64 (2): 126–27. (subscription required)
  • Scott, Phillip (2014). "Classical Recordings: Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra - Leevi Madetoja: Symphonies Nos. 1 and 3; 'Okon Fuoko' Suite". Fanfare Magazine. 37 (6): 347–48. (subscription required)

symphony, madetoja, symphony, major, three, movement, orchestral, composition, finnish, composer, leevi, madetoja, wrote, piece, from, 1914, dawn, professional, career, although, late, romantic, style, symphony, carefully, eschews, extravagance, overindulgence. The Symphony No 1 in F major Op 29 is a three movement orchestral composition by the Finnish composer Leevi Madetoja who wrote the piece from 1914 16 at the dawn of his professional career Although late Romantic in style the symphony carefully eschews the extravagance and overindulgence typical of debut efforts placing it among the most mature and restrained of first symphonies Accordingly the First is the shortest and most concentrated of Madetoja s three essays in the form and is the only one of his symphonies not to adhere to the traditional four movement symphonic template Symphony No 1by Leevi MadetojaThe composer c 1915 1918 KeyF majorOpus29Composed1914 1914 1916DedicationRobert KajanusDurationApprox 22 minutesMovements3PremiereDate10 February 1916 1916 02 10 LocationHelsinki FinlandConductorLeevi MadetojaPerformersHelsinki Philharmonic OrchestraThe Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra premiered the work in Helsinki Finland on 10 February 1916 under the composer s baton The critics received the premiere warmly concluding that an important symphonic talent had arrived on the Finnish music scene the new work s echoes of Sibelius and Tchaikovsky notwithstanding Contents 1 History 2 Orchestration 3 Structure 3 1 First movement 3 2 Second movement 3 3 Third movement 4 Discography 5 References and sources 5 1 References 5 2 SourcesHistory EditDespite the ongoing hostilities of World War I Madetoja traveled to Russia in September 1914 to take up the conductorship of the Viipuri Orchestra 1914 16 1 Madetoja found the orchestra in a state of relative devastation he was able to piece together 19 musicians a reality that forced him to spend much of his time finding and arranging material for such an undersized ensemble 2 And yet he somehow found the time to begin the biggest project of his young career a symphony During the composition process which Madetoja s conducting duties repeatedly disturbed for example he completed the finale just before the scheduled premiere 3 Madetoja received a letter of encouragement from Jean Sibelius Finland s greatest symphonist as well as Madetoja s former teacher What you wrote about your symphonic business delights me exceedingly I feel that you will achieve your greatest triumphs in that genre for I consider that you have precisely the properties that make a symphonic composer This is my firm belief Jean Sibelius in an October 1914 letter to his former pupil 4 Madetoja officially joined the ranks of symphonic composers on 10 February 1916 the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra premiered the new work under the composer s own baton Robert Kajanus the founder and chief conductor of the orchestra was the dedicatee Sibelius s firm belief indeed proved prescient as the critics received the new work warmly the general impression was that an important new symphonic talent had arrived For example the Finnish critic Evert Katila fi praised Madetoja s symphony in Uusi Suometar writing The symphony appeals through the logic of its construction and the translucent brightness of its orchestration 4 Sibelius who was in attendance also remarked upon the symphony s beauty 5 Nevertheless the teacher eyed his former student s maturation somewhat wearily For example when some reviews of the First Symphony discerned within Madetoja s music the influence of Sibelius for example Karl Wasenius fi in Hufvudstadsbladet he worried his former pupil might take offence at the comparison and mistook Madetoja s characteristic melancholia for sulkiness 6 Suddenly Sibelius found Madetoja arrogant and watched with concern as he drew closer to Kajanus with whom Sibelius had an on again off again friendship rivalry Met Madetoja who I m sorry to say has become pretty bumptious after his latest success Sibelius fretted to his diary Kajanus smothers him with flattery and he hasn t the breeding to see it for what it is 6 Orchestration EditWoodwind piccolo 3 flutes 2 oboes cor anglais 2 clarinets bass clarinet 2 bassoons Brass 4 horns 3 trumpets 3 trombones tuba Percussion timpani triangle cymbals bass drum snare drum tambourine Strings violins violas cellos double basses harpStructure EditThe First Symphony is in three movements and as such is the only one of Madetoja s three symphonies to eschew the traditional four movement symphonic format The movements are as follows AllegroLento misteriosoFinale Allegro vivace First movement Edit The first movement is in traditional sonata form the first subject Allegro is in F major and 3 4 time The dreamy second subject Meno allegro in D flat major is reminiscent of Tchaikovsky relative to the first movement it is according to the Finnish musicologist Erkki Salmenhaara from a different world an oasis of calm which brings the symphonic process to a standstill 7 Second movement Edit The second movement the slowest in tempo and the longest in duration of the three is redolent with a deep Finnish melancholy 8 The first subject Lento misterioso consists of a dissonant siren like motif on flutes juxtaposed against a lugubrious solo cello their interplay periodically interrupted by ominous interjections from the brass Half way through the movement the second subject Poco tranquillo appears a delicate woodwind dialogue in F sharp minor 7 between oboe clarinet and flute supported by string bass pizzicati strings and horns Although this passage recalls the third movement of Sibelius s Third Symphony it is by no means derivative the subject is according to Finnish musicologist Erkki Salmenhaara all Madetoja s own 7 The movement ends with the return of the first subject but modified such that solo cor anglais takes up the original cello line Third movement EditDiscography EditThus far Madetoja s First Symphony has been recorded only by Nordic orchestras usually as a component piece of a larger recording project of Madetoja s major orchestral works such as those by Petri Sakari fi and the Iceland Symphony Orchestra 1991 92 Arvo Volmer and the Oulu Symphony Orchestra 1998 2006 and John Storgards and the Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra 2012 13 Conductor Orchestra Recorded Duration LabelPetri Sakari fi Iceland Symphony Orchestra 1992 23 20 Chandos CHAN 9115 Leif Segerstam Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra 1996 25 21 Finlandia FACD 015 Arvo Volmer Oulu Symphony Orchestra 1999 20 07 Alba Records fi ABCD 144 John Storgards Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra 2013 21 13 Ondine ODE 1211 2 In his review of the Sakari and Volmer efforts the American Record Guide s Tom Godell applauds Madetoja for his ability to craft beautiful swirling rainbows of vivid color in every one of his scores but nevertheless faults the First Symphony for is lack of memorable themes or smooth transitions asserting that all too often Madetoja simply drops one idea then abruptly moves on to the next The result sounds more like a rough sketch than a polished final draft 9 Fanfare s Phillip Scott writing about Storgards s recordings of the First and Third symphonies describes the former as the most Sibelian music on this disc and praises Madetoja for having composed three of the 20th century s loveliest symphonies 10 The general impression of both reviewers seems to be that the Volmer and Storgards recordings irrepressib ly vigor ous and passionate respectively are superior to the slower more laid back interpretation of Sakari 9 10 References and sources EditReferences Edit Pulliainen 2000c p 4 Pulliainen 2000c p 5 Pulliainen 2000b p 5 a b Korhonen 2013a p 4 Tawaststjerna 1997 p 140 a b Tawaststjerna 1997 p 81 a b c Salmenhaara 1992b p 5 Korhonen 2013a p 5 a b Godell 2001 p 126 27 a b Scott 2014 p 347 48 Sources Edit Books Tawaststjerna Erik 1997 Sibelius Volume 3 1914 1957 Robert Layton English translation London Faber and Faber CD liner notes Korhonen Kimmo 2013a Leevi Madetoja Symphony No 1 and 3 Okon Fuoko Suite booklet John Storgards amp Helsinki Philharmonic Helsinki Finland Ondine p 4 7 ODE1211 2 Pulliainen Riitta 2000b Madetoja Orchestral Works 2 The Spirit Home of My Soul booklet Arvo Volmer amp Oulu Symphony Orchestra Tampere Finland Alba p 4 6 ABCD 144 Pulliainen Riitta 2000c Madetoja Orchestral Works 3 The Infinity of Fantasy booklet Arvo Volmer amp Oulu Symphony Orchestra Tampere Finland Alba p 4 6 ABCD 156 Salmenhaara Erkki 1992b Madetoja L Symphonies Nos 1 and 2 booklet Petri Sakari amp Iceland Symphony Orchestra Colchester England Chandos p 4 6 CHAN 9115 Websites Korhonen Kimmo Leevi Madetoja in Profile madetoja org en Retrieved January 29 2016 Journal articles Godell Tom 2001 Madetoja Symphony 1 Concert Overture Pastoral Suite Rustic Scenes American Record Guide 64 2 126 27 subscription required Scott Phillip 2014 Classical Recordings Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra Leevi Madetoja Symphonies Nos 1 and 3 Okon Fuoko Suite Fanfare Magazine 37 6 347 48 subscription required Portal Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symphony No 1 Madetoja amp oldid 1151446934, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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