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Symphony No. 6 (Tchaikovsky)

The Symphony No. 6 in B minor, Op. 74, also known as the Pathétique Symphony, is Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's final completed symphony, written between February and the end of August 1893. The composer entitled the work "The Passionate Symphony", employing a Russian word, Патетическая (Pateticheskaya), meaning "passionate" or "emotional", which was then translated into French as pathétique, meaning "solemn" or "emotive".

Symphony No. 6
by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
Portrait of Tchaikovsky by Nikolai Kuznetsov, 1893
Other namePathétique Symphony
KeyB minor
Opus74
PeriodRomantic music
ComposedAugust 1893
DedicationTchaikovsky's nephew, Vladimir Davydov
Durationabout 45 minutes
MovementsFour
ScoringOrchestra
Premiere
Date28 October [O.S. 16 October] 1893
LocationSaint Petersburg
ConductorPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

The composer led the first performance in Saint Petersburg on 28 October [O.S. 16 October] of that year, nine days before his death. The second performance, conducted by Eduard Nápravník, took place 21 days later, at a memorial concert on 18 November [O.S. 6 November].[1][2] It included some minor corrections that Tchaikovsky had made after the premiere, and was thus the first performance of the work in the exact form in which it is known today. The first performance in Moscow was on 16 December [O.S. 4 December], conducted by Vasily Safonov.[3] It was the last of Tchaikovsky's compositions premiered in his lifetime; his very last composition, the single-movement 3rd Piano Concerto, Op. 75, which was completed a short time before his death in October 1893, received a posthumous premiere.

Title edit

The Russian title of the symphony, Патетическая (Pateticheskaya), means "passionate" or "emotional", not "arousing pity," but it is a word reflective of a touch of concurrent suffering. Tchaikovsky considered calling it Программная (Programmnaya or "Program Symphony") but realized that would encourage curiosity about the program, which he did not want to reveal.

His brother Modest claims to have suggested the Патетическая title, which was used in early editions of the symphony; there are conflicting accounts about whether Tchaikovsky liked the title,[4] but in any event his publisher chose to keep it and the title remained. Its French translation Pathétique is generally used in French, Spanish, English, German and other languages,[5] Many English-speaking classical musicians had, by the early 20th century, adopted an English spelling and pronunciation for Tchaikovsky's symphony, dubbing it "The Pathetic", as shorthand to differentiate it from a popular 1798 Beethoven piano sonata also known as The Pathétique. Tchaikovsky's symphony was first published in piano reduction by Jurgenson of Moscow in 1893,[6] and by Robert Forberg of Leipzig in 1894.[7]

Background edit

After completing his 5th Symphony in 1888, Tchaikovsky did not start thinking about his next symphony until April 1891, on his way to the United States. The first drafts of a new symphony were started in the spring of 1891.[8] However, some or all of the symphony was not pleasing to Tchaikovsky, who tore up the manuscript "in one of his frequent moods of depression and doubt over his alleged inability to create".[8] In 1892, Tchaikovsky wrote the following to his nephew Vladimir "Bob" Davydov:

The symphony is only a work written by dint of sheer will on the part of the composer; it contains nothing that is interesting or sympathetic. It should be cast aside and forgotten. This determination on my part is admirable and irrevocable.[9]

This work was the Symphony in E, the first movement of which Tchaikovsky later converted into the one-movement 3rd Piano Concerto (his final composition), and the latter two movements of which Sergei Taneyev reworked after Tchaikovsky's death as the Andante and Finale.

In 1893, Tchaikovsky mentions an entirely new symphonic work in a letter to his brother:

I am now wholly occupied with the new work ... and it is hard for me to tear myself away from it. I believe it comes into being as the best of my works. I must finish it as soon as possible, for I have to wind up a lot of affairs and I must soon go to London. I told you that I had completed a Symphony which suddenly displeased me, and I tore it up. Now I have composed a new symphony which I certainly shall not tear up.[9]

The symphony was written in a small house in Klin and completed by August 1893. Tchaikovsky left Klin on 19 October for the first performance in Saint Petersburg, arriving "in excellent spirits".[10] However, the composer began to feel apprehension over his symphony, when, at rehearsals, the orchestra players did not exhibit any great admiration for the new work.[10] Nevertheless, the premiere was met with great appreciation. Tchaikovsky's brother Modest wrote, "There was applause and the composer was recalled, but with more enthusiasm than on previous occasions. There was not the mighty, overpowering impression made by the work when it was conducted by Eduard Nápravník, on November 18, 1893, and later, wherever it was played."[11]

Instrumentation edit

The symphony is scored for an orchestra with the following instruments:

Although not called for in the score, a bass clarinet is commonly employed to replace the solo bassoon for the four notes immediately preceding the Allegro vivo section of the first movement,[13][14][15] which originates from Austro-Hungarian conductor Hans Richter.[14][15] This substitution is because it is nearly impossible in practice for a bassoonist to execute the passage at the indicated dynamic of pppppp.[13][14]

Music edit

The symphony is in four movements:

  1. Adagio – Allegro non troppo (E minorB minorD majorD minorC-sharp major – B minor – B major)
  2. Allegro con grazia (D major – B minor – D major)
  3. Allegro molto vivace (G majorE major – G major – D major – G major)
  4. Adagio lamentoso (B minor – D major – C major – B minor)

I. Adagio – Allegro non troppo edit

 

The first movement, in sonata form, frequently alternates speeds, moods, and keys, with the main key being B minor. The introduction is formed from repeated modules of its initial theme, presented by the bassoon, whose purpose seems to be to open a dominant chord, failing to do so. Violas appear with the first theme of the Allegro in B minor, a faster variant of the slow opening melody. This section introduces the motif of the full, octave-long downward scale, which recurs throughout the symphony; it eventually leads to a long medial caesura that gives way to the secondary theme in D major.

 

The energetic development section begins abruptly with an outburst from the full orchestra, with half-diminished harmony that leads uneasily to D minor. It runs seamlessly into the fortissimo recapitulation, a great contrast in atmosphere from its hesitant equivalent at the beginning of the Allegro. Tchaikovsky soon goes into something more nightmarish, which culminates in an explosion of despair and misery in B minor, accompanied by a strong and repetitive four-note figure in the brass, which recalls the motif from the introduction. This explosion concludes in a powerful note in the trombones marked quadruple forte, a rare, extreme dynamic marking. This section ends with diminishing strains on the basses and brass, letting through the pathos and upcoming despair of the symphony. The movement concludes shortly after the recapitulation of the second subject shown above, this time in the tonic major (B major) with a coda which is also in B major, finally ending very quietly.

The terms "development" and "recapitulation" are used loosely when describing the form of this movement. The structure of the first movement is a Type 2 sonata, which involves a typical expositional rotation, and a second rotation which includes a developmental section and a tonal closure. In the case of this movement, the essential closure is an imperfect authentic cadence (IAC), making it an example of sonata failure.[16]

II. Allegro con grazia edit

The second movement, a D major dance in ternary form, is in 5
4
time
; it has been described as a "limping" waltz.[17] The opening whirling, first presented as a cello section solo, contrasts with a darker B section in B minor, the tonic minor of the symphony. There is an upward momentum to the major sections, a suggestion of reconciliatory inversion of the downward scale motif. A fragmented coda crosses the scales and becomes more wistful before leading to a calm, rippling close.

 

III. Allegro molto vivace edit

The third movement starts with a scherzo, a playful, march-like weaving of 12
8
and 4
4
in a sonatina form. The strings establish a fast, light compound meter which later lies underneath more brusque wind fanfares in 4
4
. This leads to the jubilant E major secondary theme in full, first given quietly by unison clarinets with a continued string accompaniment. Between the exposition and the recapitulation, there is no development section – only 2 bars of fragmentary retransition. The opening theme reappears emboldened, and after flourishes of scales traded between the strings and woodwind, the secondary theme returns triumphantly in G major; this is the only appearance of the bass drum and cymbals. The movement ends with a deceptive finale, once again featuring downward scales. It is probably no coincidence that the movement, with its stormy character through restless strings, wind-like whistling woodwinds and thundering brass instruments, is reminiscent of the finale from Joachim Raff's Symphony No. 3 "In the forest":[18] the symphony was one of the most played of its time, and Tchaikovsky had already been inspired by Raff in his 5th Symphony with his famous horn solo.[19]

 

IV. Adagio lamentoso edit

Back in B minor, although opened with striking half-diminished harmony, the fourth movement takes a slow six-part sonata rondo form (A-B-A-C-A-B). The opening A theme in the first and second violins appears frequently through the movement, varying in intensity. The theme is a "composite melody": at first, neither the first nor second violins play in full the upper line that is heard.[20]

 

A calmer B theme in D major builds up to a full orchestral palette, with driving brass and descending scales pushing to a Neapolitan C major caesura. The B theme is transformed in a dramatic return to B minor before the A theme returns. Similarly to the first movement, there is a turbulent climax with prominent trombones in the development section (the C theme). This is followed by the most agitated restatement of the A theme (the start of the recapitulation), on an F bass pedal. The music fades into a single, unique strike of a tam-tam; this quietly introduces a funereal chorale in the low brass which rounds off the dominant harmony. The return of the B section, originally a break in the clouds, is richly mournful, coinciding with the final resolution to B minor. The waves of descending muted string motifs carry on down into the lower strings and bassoons, finally dying away in total tragedy.

Among Tchaikovsky's symphonies, this is the only one to end in a minor key. His first, second, fourth and fifth symphonies, plus the Manfred Symphony, are all minor-key symphonies that end in the tonic major, while the home key of his third symphony is D major (even though it begins in D minor) and that of his unfinished Symphony in E (unofficially "No. 7") is E major.

It is also unusual for a slow movement to come at the end of a symphony. The despondent effect of the structural upheaval here has been the subject of much critical analysis. Had Tchaikovsky followed the standard four-movement structure, the movements would have been ordered like this:

  1. Adagio – Allegro non troppo
  2. Adagio lamentoso (actually IV)
  3. Allegro con grazia (actually II)
  4. Finale: Allegro molto vivace (actually III)

Interpretation edit

 
Tchaikovsky's draft of the Sixth Symphony

Tchaikovsky critic Richard Taruskin writes:

Suicide theories were much stimulated by the Sixth Symphony, which was first performed under the composer's baton only nine days before his demise, with its lugubrious finale (ending morendo, 'dying away'), its brief but conspicuous allusion to the Orthodox requiem liturgy in the first movement and above all its easily misread subtitle. ... When the symphony was done again a couple of weeks later, in memoriam and with subtitle in place, everyone listened hard for portents, and that is how the symphony became a transparent suicide note. Depression was the first diagnosis. 'Homosexual tragedy' came later.[21]

In the words of the critic Alexander Poznansky, "Since the arrival of the 'court of honour' theory in the West, performances of Tchaikovsky's last symphony are almost invariably accompanied by annotations treating it as a testimony of homosexual martyrdom."[22] Yet critic David Brown describes the idea of the Sixth Symphony as some sort of suicide note as "patent nonsense".[23] Other scholars, including Michael Paul Smith, believe that with or without the supposed 'court of honour' sentence, there is no way that Tchaikovsky could have known the time of his own death while composing his last masterpiece. There is also evidence that Tchaikovsky was unlikely to have been depressed while composing the symphony, with his brother noting of him after he had sent the manuscript for publishing, "I had not seen him so bright for a long time past."[20]

Dedication and suggested programs edit

Tchaikovsky dedicated the Pathétique to his nephew, Vladimir "Bob" Davydov, whom he greatly admired.[24]

The Pathétique has been the subject of a number of theories as to a hidden program. This goes back to the first performance of the work, when fellow composer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov asked Tchaikovsky whether there was a program to the new symphony, and Tchaikovsky asserted that there was, but would not divulge it.[25]

 
Tchaikovsky's "Cross"-motif, associated with the crucifixion, himself, and Tristan, a variation of which first appears in mm. 1–2 of his Pathétique Symphony.[26] Tchaikovsky identified with and associated the cross-motif with "star-cross'd lovers" in general, such as in Romeo and Juliet.[26]

A suggested program has been what Taruskin disparagingly termed "symphony as suicide note".[27] This idea began to assert itself as early as the second performance of the symphony in Saint Petersburg, not long after the composer had died. People at that performance "listened hard for portents. As always, they found what they were looking for: a brief but conspicuous quotation from the Russian Orthodox requiem at the stormy climax of the first movement, and of course the unconventional Adagio finale with its tense harmonies at the onset and its touching depiction of the dying of the light in conclusion".[27] Countering this is Tchaikovsky's statement on 26 September/8 October 1893 that he was in no mood to write any sort of requiem. This was in reply to a suggestion from his close friend Grand Duke Konstantin that he write a requiem for their mutual friend the writer Aleksey Apukhtin, who had died in late August, just as Tchaikovsky was completing the Pathétique.[28][29]

Tchaikovsky specialist David Brown suggests that the symphony deals with the power of Fate in life and death.[30] This program would not only be similar to those suggested for the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies, but also parallels a program suggested by Tchaikovsky for his unfinished Symphony in E.[30] That program reads, "The ultimate essence ... of the symphony is Life. First part – all impulse, passion, confidence, thirst for activity. Must be short (the finale death – result of collapse). Second part love: third disappointments; fourth ends dying away (also short)."[31]

Simon Karlinsky, a composer[32] and professor of Slavic languages and literature at UC Berkeley and "an expert on homosexuality in pre-Soviet culture",[33] wrote in the gay literary magazine Christopher Street in 1988 that in 1941 a musician friend of his youth called Alex, who had spent several months associating with the painter Pavel Tchelitchew, told him an oral tradition that Tchelitchew had heard from the composer's brother Modest, told to him by Tchaikovsky himself. According to this, what Karlinsky himself calls "poorly remembered hearsay", the secret programme of the symphony is about love between men: the search for it, from the beginning of the first movement; finding it, in the romantic andante theme (m 89); and the attacks of a hostile world on it, in the agitated allegro vivo passage that follows (m 161); and escape from that, in the return to the love them (andante come prima, m 305). The last movement, Karlinsky was told, is an elegy for a dead lover.[34]

In popular culture edit

The second theme of the first movement formed the basis of a popular song in the 1940s, "(This is) The Story of a Starry Night" (by Mann Curtis, Al Hoffman and Jerry Livingston) which was popularized by Glenn Miller. This same theme is the music behind "Where", a 1959 hit for Tony Williams and the Platters as well as "In Time", by Steve Lawrence in 1961, and "John O'Dreams" by Bill Caddick. All four songs have different lyrics. It was also used to great effect in one of the early Cinerama movies in the mid-50s.

Excerpts from the symphony can be heard in a number of films, including Victor Young’s theme for Howard Hughes’ 1943 American Western The Outlaw, 1942’s Now, Voyager, the 1997 version of Anna Karenina, as well as The Ruling Class, Minority Report, Sweet Bird of Youth, Soylent Green, Maurice, The Aviator, and The Death of Stalin. It has also accompanied the cartoon The Ren & Stimpy Show, specifically the episode 'Son of Stimpy' where the eponymous cat walks out into a blizzard.

The Nice included Keith Emerson's arrangement of the third movement on their 1971 album Elegy.

The third movement of Tchaikovsky's Sixth Symphony was featured during the 2010 Winter Olympics closing ceremony, being danced by Russia's national ballet company.

A slower, synthesised version was utilised in the 2011 video game Pandora's Tower.

The sixth symphony is used extensively in a 2011 collaborative art film by Šejla Kamerić, 1395 Days Without Red, currently part of the Pinault Collection at the Punta della Dogana in Venice. An orchestra rehearses different sections of the symphony in the short film, as a woman is filmed walking through Sarajevo. The woman and the orchestra each stop and start, to express the manner in which ordinary people moved through the city during the siege of Sarajevo.

Tchaikovsky's Sixth is featured in the 2014 sci-fi video game Destiny, during several missions in which the player must interact with a Russian supercomputer, Rasputin, who serves as a planetary defense system.

Tchaikovsky's Sixth plays a major role in E. M. Forster's novel Maurice (written in 1913 and later, but unpublished until 1971), where it serves as a veiled reference to homosexuality.[35]

The third movement is played during the annual Groundhog Day celebration at Gobbler's Knob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania as members of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club's Inner Circle process to the stage.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Steinberg 1995, p. 635.
  2. ^ Poznansky, p. 603.
  3. ^ Tchaikovsky Research.net
  4. ^ Listen to "Discovering Music – Tchaikovsky's 6th Symphony". from 2:30
  5. ^ Steinberg 1995, p. 638.
  6. ^ see IMSLP
  7. ^ coproduction with Jurgenson of Moscow most likely; also, see "Hofmeisters Monatsberichte" (in German). March 1894. Retrieved November 22, 2012.
  8. ^ a b Bagar 1947, p. 754
  9. ^ a b quoted in Bagar 1947, p. 754
  10. ^ a b Bagar 1947, p. 755
  11. ^ quoted in Bagar 1947, p. 755
  12. ^ P.I.Tchaikovsky. Symphony No.6. Breitkopf und Härtel. p. 19. (Published ca. 1945. Online version at IMSLP)
  13. ^ a b c Norman Del Mar (1983). Anatomy of the Orchestra. University of California Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-0520050624.
  14. ^ a b c d Steinberg 1995, n. 19 on p. 640
  15. ^ a b c Christopher Fifield (2016). Hans Richter. Boydell & Brewer. p. 300. ISBN 978-1783270217.
  16. ^ Wolfe, Daniel (May 2020). "Popular but Disparaged: Sonata Structures in Tchaikovsky's Symphonies Four, Five, and Six". MTI - Dissertation. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  17. ^ "Tchaikovsky's Symphony # 6 (Pathetique), Classical Classics, Peter Gutmann". Classical Notes. Retrieved 2012-04-20.
  18. ^ Look at the scores or compare for example Stadlmair's recording of Raff's final (start from minute 11:00) with the last third of this movement.
  19. ^ "Tchaikovsky's view of Raff". Retrieved 2020-04-24.
  20. ^ a b Service, Tom (2014-08-26). "Symphony Guide: Tchaikovsky's Sixth ('Pathetique')". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-04-29.
  21. ^ Taruskin, Richard (1 July 2000). "The Essential Tchaikovsky". Russian Life. Retrieved 8 January 2022.
  22. ^ Poznansky, Alexander (August 1998). "'Tchaikovsky's Last Days': I". Music & Letters. Oxford University Press. 79 (3): 463–467. doi:10.1093/ml/79.3.463-c. JSTOR 855392.
  23. ^ Brown, David (November 1997). "How Did Tchaikovsky Come to Die: And Does It Really Matter". Music & Letters. Oxford University Press. 78 (4): 581–588. doi:10.1093/ml/78.4.581. JSTOR 737640.
  24. ^ Poznansky, p. 558.
  25. ^ Rimsky-Korsakov 1942, pp. 339–340.
  26. ^ a b Jackson 1999, p. 51
  27. ^ a b Taruskin 2009, p. 133
  28. ^ Poznansky, p. 569.
  29. ^ Tchaikovsky Research: Aleksey Apukhtin. Retrieved 21 June 2015
  30. ^ a b Brown 1992, p. 445
  31. ^ Brown 1992, p. 388.
  32. ^ Hughes, Robert P. (2010). "University of California Academic Senate: In Memoriam, Simon Karlinsky, Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Emeritus, UC Berkeley, 1924 – 2009". Retrieved September 25, 2023. {{cite magazine}}: Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  33. ^ Woo, Elaine (July 28, 2009). "Simon Karlinsky dies at 84; expert on Slavic languages and literature". L A Times. Los Angeles. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  34. ^ Karlinsky, Simon (1988). "Should We Retire Tchaikovsky". Christopher Street Vol 11 No 3 pp16-21. New York: That New Magazine, inc.
  35. ^ Keeling, Bret L. (March 2003). "'No Trace of Presence': Tchaikovsky and the Sixth in Forster's Maurice". Mosaic. University of Manitoba. 36 (1): 85–101. JSTOR 44030280.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Cross, Milton and Ewen, David, "Peter Ilitch Tchaikovsky", in vol. II of Milton Cross' Encyclopedia of Great Composers and Their Music (Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1962).
  • Holden, Anthony, Tchaikovsky: A Biography (New York: Random House, 1995). ISBN 0-679-42006-1.
  • Keller, Hans, "Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky", in vol. I of The Symphony, ed. Robert Simpson (Harmondsworth, 1966).
  • Ritzarev, Marina, Tchaikovsky's Pathétique and Russian Culture (Ashgate, 2014). ISBN 9781472424112.

External links edit

symphony, tchaikovsky, symphony, minor, also, known, pathétique, symphony, pyotr, ilyich, tchaikovsky, final, completed, symphony, written, between, february, august, 1893, composer, entitled, work, passionate, symphony, employing, russian, word, Патетическая,. The Symphony No 6 in B minor Op 74 also known as the Pathetique Symphony is Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky s final completed symphony written between February and the end of August 1893 The composer entitled the work The Passionate Symphony employing a Russian word Pateticheskaya Pateticheskaya meaning passionate or emotional which was then translated into French as pathetique meaning solemn or emotive Symphony No 6by Pyotr Ilyich TchaikovskyPortrait of Tchaikovsky by Nikolai Kuznetsov 1893Other namePathetique SymphonyKeyB minorOpus74PeriodRomantic musicComposedAugust 1893DedicationTchaikovsky s nephew Vladimir DavydovDurationabout 45 minutesMovementsFourScoringOrchestraPremiereDate28 October O S 16 October 1893LocationSaint PetersburgConductorPyotr Ilyich TchaikovskyThe composer led the first performance in Saint Petersburg on 28 October O S 16 October of that year nine days before his death The second performance conducted by Eduard Napravnik took place 21 days later at a memorial concert on 18 November O S 6 November 1 2 It included some minor corrections that Tchaikovsky had made after the premiere and was thus the first performance of the work in the exact form in which it is known today The first performance in Moscow was on 16 December O S 4 December conducted by Vasily Safonov 3 It was the last of Tchaikovsky s compositions premiered in his lifetime his very last composition the single movement 3rd Piano Concerto Op 75 which was completed a short time before his death in October 1893 received a posthumous premiere Contents 1 Title 2 Background 3 Instrumentation 4 Music 4 1 I Adagio Allegro non troppo 4 2 II Allegro con grazia 4 3 III Allegro molto vivace 4 4 IV Adagio lamentoso 5 Interpretation 5 1 Dedication and suggested programs 6 In popular culture 7 Notes 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksTitle editThe Russian title of the symphony Pateticheskaya Pateticheskaya means passionate or emotional not arousing pity but it is a word reflective of a touch of concurrent suffering Tchaikovsky considered calling it Programmnaya Programmnaya or Program Symphony but realized that would encourage curiosity about the program which he did not want to reveal His brother Modest claims to have suggested the Pateticheskaya title which was used in early editions of the symphony there are conflicting accounts about whether Tchaikovsky liked the title 4 but in any event his publisher chose to keep it and the title remained Its French translation Pathetique is generally used in French Spanish English German and other languages 5 Many English speaking classical musicians had by the early 20th century adopted an English spelling and pronunciation for Tchaikovsky s symphony dubbing it The Pathetic as shorthand to differentiate it from a popular 1798 Beethoven piano sonata also known as The Pathetique Tchaikovsky s symphony was first published in piano reduction by Jurgenson of Moscow in 1893 6 and by Robert Forberg of Leipzig in 1894 7 Background editAfter completing his 5th Symphony in 1888 Tchaikovsky did not start thinking about his next symphony until April 1891 on his way to the United States The first drafts of a new symphony were started in the spring of 1891 8 However some or all of the symphony was not pleasing to Tchaikovsky who tore up the manuscript in one of his frequent moods of depression and doubt over his alleged inability to create 8 In 1892 Tchaikovsky wrote the following to his nephew Vladimir Bob Davydov The symphony is only a work written by dint of sheer will on the part of the composer it contains nothing that is interesting or sympathetic It should be cast aside and forgotten This determination on my part is admirable and irrevocable 9 This work was the Symphony in E the first movement of which Tchaikovsky later converted into the one movement 3rd Piano Concerto his final composition and the latter two movements of which Sergei Taneyev reworked after Tchaikovsky s death as the Andante and Finale In 1893 Tchaikovsky mentions an entirely new symphonic work in a letter to his brother I am now wholly occupied with the new work and it is hard for me to tear myself away from it I believe it comes into being as the best of my works I must finish it as soon as possible for I have to wind up a lot of affairs and I must soon go to London I told you that I had completed a Symphony which suddenly displeased me and I tore it up Now I have composed a new symphony which I certainly shall not tear up 9 The symphony was written in a small house in Klin and completed by August 1893 Tchaikovsky left Klin on 19 October for the first performance in Saint Petersburg arriving in excellent spirits 10 However the composer began to feel apprehension over his symphony when at rehearsals the orchestra players did not exhibit any great admiration for the new work 10 Nevertheless the premiere was met with great appreciation Tchaikovsky s brother Modest wrote There was applause and the composer was recalled but with more enthusiasm than on previous occasions There was not the mighty overpowering impression made by the work when it was conducted by Eduard Napravnik on November 18 1893 and later wherever it was played 11 Instrumentation editThe symphony is scored for an orchestra with the following instruments Woodwinds 3 flutes 3rd doubling piccolo 2 oboes 2 clarinets in A 2 bassoons Brass 4 horns 2 trumpets 3 trombones 1 tuba Percussion timpani bass drum cymbals tam tam ad libitum Strings violins I II violas cellos double basses Replacement of a bassoon with a bass clarinet From the anacrusis of bar 154 to bar 160 of the first movement 12 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file In the bar 160 above the last four notes of the bassoon shown in blue ink are often played by a bass clarinet 13 14 15 Although not called for in the score a bass clarinet is commonly employed to replace the solo bassoon for the four notes immediately preceding the Allegro vivo section of the first movement 13 14 15 which originates from Austro Hungarian conductor Hans Richter 14 15 This substitution is because it is nearly impossible in practice for a bassoonist to execute the passage at the indicated dynamic of pppppp 13 14 Music edit nbsp I Adagio Allegro non troppo source source II Allegro con grazia source source III Allegro molto vivace source source IV Adagio lamentoso source source Problems playing these files See media help The symphony is in four movements Adagio Allegro non troppo E minor B minor D major D minor C sharp major B minor B major Allegro con grazia D major B minor D major Allegro molto vivace G major E major G major D major G major Adagio lamentoso B minor D major C major B minor I Adagio Allegro non troppo edit nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The first movement in sonata form frequently alternates speeds moods and keys with the main key being B minor The introduction is formed from repeated modules of its initial theme presented by the bassoon whose purpose seems to be to open a dominant chord failing to do so Violas appear with the first theme of the Allegro in B minor a faster variant of the slow opening melody This section introduces the motif of the full octave long downward scale which recurs throughout the symphony it eventually leads to a long medial caesura that gives way to the secondary theme in D major nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The energetic development section begins abruptly with an outburst from the full orchestra with half diminished harmony that leads uneasily to D minor It runs seamlessly into the fortissimo recapitulation a great contrast in atmosphere from its hesitant equivalent at the beginning of the Allegro Tchaikovsky soon goes into something more nightmarish which culminates in an explosion of despair and misery in B minor accompanied by a strong and repetitive four note figure in the brass which recalls the motif from the introduction This explosion concludes in a powerful note in the trombones marked quadruple forte a rare extreme dynamic marking This section ends with diminishing strains on the basses and brass letting through the pathos and upcoming despair of the symphony The movement concludes shortly after the recapitulation of the second subject shown above this time in the tonic major B major with a coda which is also in B major finally ending very quietly The terms development and recapitulation are used loosely when describing the form of this movement The structure of the first movement is a Type 2 sonata which involves a typical expositional rotation and a second rotation which includes a developmental section and a tonal closure In the case of this movement the essential closure is an imperfect authentic cadence IAC making it an example of sonata failure 16 II Allegro con grazia edit The second movement a D major dance in ternary form is in 54 time it has been described as a limping waltz 17 The opening whirling first presented as a cello section solo contrasts with a darker B section in B minor the tonic minor of the symphony There is an upward momentum to the major sections a suggestion of reconciliatory inversion of the downward scale motif A fragmented coda crosses the scales and becomes more wistful before leading to a calm rippling close nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file III Allegro molto vivace edit The third movement starts with a scherzo a playful march like weaving of 128 and 44 in a sonatina form The strings establish a fast light compound meter which later lies underneath more brusque wind fanfares in 44 This leads to the jubilant E major secondary theme in full first given quietly by unison clarinets with a continued string accompaniment Between the exposition and the recapitulation there is no development section only 2 bars of fragmentary retransition The opening theme reappears emboldened and after flourishes of scales traded between the strings and woodwind the secondary theme returns triumphantly in G major this is the only appearance of the bass drum and cymbals The movement ends with a deceptive finale once again featuring downward scales It is probably no coincidence that the movement with its stormy character through restless strings wind like whistling woodwinds and thundering brass instruments is reminiscent of the finale from Joachim Raff s Symphony No 3 In the forest 18 the symphony was one of the most played of its time and Tchaikovsky had already been inspired by Raff in his 5th Symphony with his famous horn solo 19 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file IV Adagio lamentoso edit Back in B minor although opened with striking half diminished harmony the fourth movement takes a slow six part sonata rondo form A B A C A B The opening A theme in the first and second violins appears frequently through the movement varying in intensity The theme is a composite melody at first neither the first nor second violins play in full the upper line that is heard 20 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file A calmer B theme in D major builds up to a full orchestral palette with driving brass and descending scales pushing to a Neapolitan C major caesura The B theme is transformed in a dramatic return to B minor before the A theme returns Similarly to the first movement there is a turbulent climax with prominent trombones in the development section the C theme This is followed by the most agitated restatement of the A theme the start of the recapitulation on an F bass pedal The music fades into a single unique strike of a tam tam this quietly introduces a funereal chorale in the low brass which rounds off the dominant harmony The return of the B section originally a break in the clouds is richly mournful coinciding with the final resolution to B minor The waves of descending muted string motifs carry on down into the lower strings and bassoons finally dying away in total tragedy Among Tchaikovsky s symphonies this is the only one to end in a minor key His first second fourth and fifth symphonies plus the Manfred Symphony are all minor key symphonies that end in the tonic major while the home key of his third symphony is D major even though it begins in D minor and that of his unfinished Symphony in E unofficially No 7 is E major It is also unusual for a slow movement to come at the end of a symphony The despondent effect of the structural upheaval here has been the subject of much critical analysis Had Tchaikovsky followed the standard four movement structure the movements would have been ordered like this Adagio Allegro non troppoAdagio lamentoso actually IV Allegro con grazia actually II Finale Allegro molto vivace actually III Interpretation edit nbsp Tchaikovsky s draft of the Sixth SymphonyTchaikovsky critic Richard Taruskin writes Suicide theories were much stimulated by the Sixth Symphony which was first performed under the composer s baton only nine days before his demise with its lugubrious finale ending morendo dying away its brief but conspicuous allusion to the Orthodox requiem liturgy in the first movement and above all its easily misread subtitle When the symphony was done again a couple of weeks later in memoriam and with subtitle in place everyone listened hard for portents and that is how the symphony became a transparent suicide note Depression was the first diagnosis Homosexual tragedy came later 21 In the words of the critic Alexander Poznansky Since the arrival of the court of honour theory in the West performances of Tchaikovsky s last symphony are almost invariably accompanied by annotations treating it as a testimony of homosexual martyrdom 22 Yet critic David Brown describes the idea of the Sixth Symphony as some sort of suicide note as patent nonsense 23 Other scholars including Michael Paul Smith believe that with or without the supposed court of honour sentence there is no way that Tchaikovsky could have known the time of his own death while composing his last masterpiece There is also evidence that Tchaikovsky was unlikely to have been depressed while composing the symphony with his brother noting of him after he had sent the manuscript for publishing I had not seen him so bright for a long time past 20 Dedication and suggested programs edit Tchaikovsky dedicated the Pathetique to his nephew Vladimir Bob Davydov whom he greatly admired 24 The Pathetique has been the subject of a number of theories as to a hidden program This goes back to the first performance of the work when fellow composer Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov asked Tchaikovsky whether there was a program to the new symphony and Tchaikovsky asserted that there was but would not divulge it 25 nbsp source source source Tchaikovsky s Cross motif associated with the crucifixion himself and Tristan a variation of which first appears in mm 1 2 of his Pathetique Symphony 26 Tchaikovsky identified with and associated the cross motif with star cross d lovers in general such as in Romeo and Juliet 26 A suggested program has been what Taruskin disparagingly termed symphony as suicide note 27 This idea began to assert itself as early as the second performance of the symphony in Saint Petersburg not long after the composer had died People at that performance listened hard for portents As always they found what they were looking for a brief but conspicuous quotation from the Russian Orthodox requiem at the stormy climax of the first movement and of course the unconventional Adagio finale with its tense harmonies at the onset and its touching depiction of the dying of the light in conclusion 27 Countering this is Tchaikovsky s statement on 26 September 8 October 1893 that he was in no mood to write any sort of requiem This was in reply to a suggestion from his close friend Grand Duke Konstantin that he write a requiem for their mutual friend the writer Aleksey Apukhtin who had died in late August just as Tchaikovsky was completing the Pathetique 28 29 Tchaikovsky specialist David Brown suggests that the symphony deals with the power of Fate in life and death 30 This program would not only be similar to those suggested for the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies but also parallels a program suggested by Tchaikovsky for his unfinished Symphony in E 30 That program reads The ultimate essence of the symphony is Life First part all impulse passion confidence thirst for activity Must be short the finale death result of collapse Second part love third disappointments fourth ends dying away also short 31 Simon Karlinsky a composer 32 and professor of Slavic languages and literature at UC Berkeley and an expert on homosexuality in pre Soviet culture 33 wrote in the gay literary magazine Christopher Street in 1988 that in 1941 a musician friend of his youth called Alex who had spent several months associating with the painter Pavel Tchelitchew told him an oral tradition that Tchelitchew had heard from the composer s brother Modest told to him by Tchaikovsky himself According to this what Karlinsky himself calls poorly remembered hearsay the secret programme of the symphony is about love between men the search for it from the beginning of the first movement finding it in the romantic andante theme m 89 and the attacks of a hostile world on it in the agitated allegro vivo passage that follows m 161 and escape from that in the return to the love them andante come prima m 305 The last movement Karlinsky was told is an elegy for a dead lover 34 In popular culture editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Symphony No 6 Tchaikovsky news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The second theme of the first movement formed the basis of a popular song in the 1940s This is The Story of a Starry Night by Mann Curtis Al Hoffman and Jerry Livingston which was popularized by Glenn Miller This same theme is the music behind Where a 1959 hit for Tony Williams and the Platters as well as In Time by Steve Lawrence in 1961 and John O Dreams by Bill Caddick All four songs have different lyrics It was also used to great effect in one of the early Cinerama movies in the mid 50s Excerpts from the symphony can be heard in a number of films including Victor Young s theme for Howard Hughes 1943 American Western The Outlaw 1942 s Now Voyager the 1997 version of Anna Karenina as well as The Ruling Class Minority Report Sweet Bird of Youth Soylent Green Maurice The Aviator and The Death of Stalin It has also accompanied the cartoon The Ren amp Stimpy Show specifically the episode Son of Stimpy where the eponymous cat walks out into a blizzard The Nice included Keith Emerson s arrangement of the third movement on their 1971 album Elegy The third movement of Tchaikovsky s Sixth Symphony was featured during the 2010 Winter Olympics closing ceremony being danced by Russia s national ballet company A slower synthesised version was utilised in the 2011 video game Pandora s Tower The sixth symphony is used extensively in a 2011 collaborative art film by Sejla Kameric 1395 Days Without Red currently part of the Pinault Collection at the Punta della Dogana in Venice An orchestra rehearses different sections of the symphony in the short film as a woman is filmed walking through Sarajevo The woman and the orchestra each stop and start to express the manner in which ordinary people moved through the city during the siege of Sarajevo Tchaikovsky s Sixth is featured in the 2014 sci fi video game Destiny during several missions in which the player must interact with a Russian supercomputer Rasputin who serves as a planetary defense system Tchaikovsky s Sixth plays a major role in E M Forster s novel Maurice written in 1913 and later but unpublished until 1971 where it serves as a veiled reference to homosexuality 35 The third movement is played during the annual Groundhog Day celebration at Gobbler s Knob in Punxsutawney Pennsylvania as members of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club s Inner Circle process to the stage Notes edit Steinberg 1995 p 635 Poznansky p 603 Tchaikovsky Research net Listen to Discovering Music Tchaikovsky s 6th Symphony from 2 30 Steinberg 1995 p 638 see IMSLP coproduction with Jurgenson of Moscow most likely also see Hofmeisters Monatsberichte in German March 1894 Retrieved November 22 2012 a b Bagar 1947 p 754 a b quoted in Bagar 1947 p 754 a b Bagar 1947 p 755 quoted in Bagar 1947 p 755 P I Tchaikovsky Symphony No 6 Breitkopf und Hartel p 19 Published ca 1945 Online version at IMSLP a b c Norman Del Mar 1983 Anatomy of the Orchestra University of California Press p 180 ISBN 978 0520050624 a b c d Steinberg 1995 n 19 on p 640 a b c Christopher Fifield 2016 Hans Richter Boydell amp Brewer p 300 ISBN 978 1783270217 Wolfe Daniel May 2020 Popular but Disparaged Sonata Structures in Tchaikovsky s Symphonies Four Five and Six MTI Dissertation Retrieved 22 October 2023 Tchaikovsky s Symphony 6 Pathetique Classical Classics Peter Gutmann Classical Notes Retrieved 2012 04 20 Look at the scores or compare for example Stadlmair s recording of Raff s final start from minute 11 00 with the last third of this movement Tchaikovsky s view of Raff Retrieved 2020 04 24 a b Service Tom 2014 08 26 Symphony Guide Tchaikovsky s Sixth Pathetique The Guardian Retrieved 2018 04 29 Taruskin Richard 1 July 2000 The Essential Tchaikovsky Russian Life Retrieved 8 January 2022 Poznansky Alexander August 1998 Tchaikovsky s Last Days I Music amp Letters Oxford University Press 79 3 463 467 doi 10 1093 ml 79 3 463 c JSTOR 855392 Brown David November 1997 How Did Tchaikovsky Come to Die And Does It Really Matter Music amp Letters Oxford University Press 78 4 581 588 doi 10 1093 ml 78 4 581 JSTOR 737640 Poznansky p 558 Rimsky Korsakov 1942 pp 339 340 a b Jackson 1999 p 51 a b Taruskin 2009 p 133 Poznansky p 569 Tchaikovsky Research Aleksey Apukhtin Retrieved 21 June 2015 a b Brown 1992 p 445 Brown 1992 p 388 Hughes Robert P 2010 University of California Academic Senate In Memoriam Simon Karlinsky Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures Emeritus UC Berkeley 1924 2009 Retrieved September 25 2023 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Cite magazine requires magazine help Woo Elaine July 28 2009 Simon Karlinsky dies at 84 expert on Slavic languages and literature L A Times Los Angeles Retrieved September 25 2023 Karlinsky Simon 1988 Should We Retire Tchaikovsky Christopher Street Vol 11 No 3 pp16 21 New York That New Magazine inc Keeling Bret L March 2003 No Trace of Presence Tchaikovsky and the Sixth in Forster s Maurice Mosaic University of Manitoba 36 1 85 101 JSTOR 44030280 Sources edit Bagar Robert 1947 Peter Ilyitch Tchaikowsky The Concert Companion A Comprehensive Guide to Symphonic Music New York McGraw Hill Brown David 1992 Tchaikovsky The Final Years New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 03099 7 Jackson Timothy L 1999 Tchaikovsky Symphony No 6 Pathetique Cambridge Music Handbooks Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 64676 6 Poznansky Alexander Tchaikovsky The Quest for the Inner Man full citation needed Rimsky Korsakov Nikolai 1942 My Musical Life 3rd ed New York Knopf Steinberg Michael 1995 The Symphony Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512665 3 Taruskin Richard 2009 On Russian Music Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 9780520268067 Further reading editCross Milton and Ewen David Peter Ilitch Tchaikovsky in vol II of Milton Cross Encyclopedia of Great Composers and Their Music Garden City New York Doubleday 1962 Holden Anthony Tchaikovsky A Biography New York Random House 1995 ISBN 0 679 42006 1 Keller Hans Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky in vol I of The Symphony ed Robert Simpson Harmondsworth 1966 Ritzarev Marina Tchaikovsky s Pathetique and Russian Culture Ashgate 2014 ISBN 9781472424112 External links editSymphony No 6 Tchaikovsky Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symphony No 6 Tchaikovsky amp oldid 1203843415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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