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Symphony No.1 in B minor - Kurt Atterberg 

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Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra conducted by Stig Westerberg.
I - Allegro con fuoco - Tranquillo - Tempo I - Tranquillo - Più mosso - Tranquillo - Più mosso - Molto pesante - Tempo I - Tranquillo - Tempo I - Tranquillo - Poco a poco più mosso: 0:00
II - Adagio - (attacca): 10:19
III - Scherzo. Presto - Pesante - Tranquillo - Tranquillo - Presto: 19:49
IV - Adagio - Allegro energico - Tempo I - Meno mosso - Tempo I - Largamente - Più pesante: 27:21
Atterberg's Symphony No.1 was composed between 1909-11, being premiered in Gothenburg on January 10 of 1912, performed by the Gothenburg Orchestral Society conducted by the composer himself. It was received with enthusiasm in all of Europe, despite being a youthful work. The great orchestras interpreted it as one of the most famous works written by a Swedish composer.
The first movement is written in sonata form. It begins with a powerful and passionate main theme, presented through a dense orchestration. It is contrasted by a deeply lyrical, almost pastoral second theme, derived from the main one. An intensely dramatic and romantic development takes place, full of a youthful vigour and energy. The music culminates in several climaxes of great forcefulness. The reappearance of the opening fanfare leads us to the recapitulation of the themes. A resolute coda ends the movement.
The second movement is written in ternary form. It opens with a lyrical and contemplative main theme on strings, soon taken by the wood. The music then unfolds in a rhapsodic manner, similar in style to Richard Strauss. The music culminates in a romantic climax of grand splendour. The central parts begins with a reflective second theme presented by the English horn and clarinet, rising in a dramatic and dissonant climax. The main theme then reappears in a triumphal recapitulation of nordic spirit. A dubious transition leads us into the next part.
The third movement is an unusual scherzo. It begins with a mocking ostinato motive, over which is built a rhythmic and forceful main theme. This repetition is based on a strict periodicity of four bars. There is no separate trio section, instead melodic phrases are introduced in counterpoint in the middle part. However, the motive still remains underground, keeping the momentum and moving the music towards a grand climax. Gradually the music calms down, seeming to end with a peaceful coda, before a sudden outburst ends the movement forcefully.
The fourth movement is structured in sonata form. It opens with a substantial slow introduction. A deeply lyrical theme is presented by violins, almost like a wordless love song, followed by the rest of the wood. After a brief pause, a masculine and heroic main theme is presented by the brass, contrasted by a bright and lyrical second theme. The development that ensues combines the sensuousness of the second theme and the masculine energy of the main one. An unresolved climax leads us to a recapitulation of the second theme. The main one is greatly anticipated, exploding in a massive climax. A victorious coda ends the work triumphally.
Picture: "Spectres from the North" or "Icebergs in Mid-Atlantic" (1890) by the American painter Thomas Moran.
Musical analysis partially written by myself. Source: bit.ly/3I7TvWZ
Unfortunately the score is not available.

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20 июл 2018

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Комментарии : 33   
@jorgefraile218
@jorgefraile218 2 года назад
I feel so glad to have heard this magnific symphony, people don't know what they're missing
@hectorbarrionuevo6034
@hectorbarrionuevo6034 2 года назад
What a great melodist and orchestral colorist Atterberg was !! Guess he was a model for film composers ...
@shin-i-chikozima
@shin-i-chikozima 2 года назад
This heroic melody is splendid
@bowerdw
@bowerdw 5 лет назад
This work took me to excellence as a listener.
@elmaraweiawa2454
@elmaraweiawa2454 10 дней назад
genial
@gabrieru1983
@gabrieru1983 6 лет назад
Excelente! Una buena oportunidad de revisitar el ciclo de Atterberg, el cual posee varias sinfonías gloriosas....muchas gracias Sergio!
@michelealba744
@michelealba744 11 месяцев назад
Une belle découverte ! Une symphonie qui mériterait vraiment d'être jouée plus souvent . Un compositeur très inspiré, tombé hélas dans l'oubli comme tant d'autres ... Eine wirklich melodische Sinfonie, die es verdienen würde, öfter gespielt zu werden ! Leider ist dieser begabte Komponist , wie andere, in Vergessenheit geraten ... Man kann es also nur bedauern ....Für mich, eine erfreuliche Entdeckung !
@gloomyloser_
@gloomyloser_ Год назад
magnificent!
@fulviopolce9785
@fulviopolce9785 3 года назад
Attraente sinfonia che paradossalmente la considero la meno conservativa....Bravo. Complimenti per il bell'inserimento.
@Scottlp2
@Scottlp2 2 года назад
Nice. Thanks!
@fulviopolce9785
@fulviopolce9785 2 года назад
Ottima sinfonia.
@Minabezerai
@Minabezerai 3 года назад
The Moment at 29:58 came out of nowhere! it just hits you with emotion and just goes away...weird.
@johnpcomposer
@johnpcomposer 2 года назад
I'm not sure what is meant by memorable themes. It does seem quite tuneful, that is melodically attractive even if melodic = tunes and you are expecting a certain kind of melody. It reminds me most of early Nielsen, which is hardly a bad thing. It is very attractive music. I've never given Atterberg much of a chance and I suppose mainly when I was shopping for 20th century symphonists and happened upon Atterberg I was looking for something a little more modern sounding. It's important to take every composer on their own terms. What I'm getting so far is an approach between motivic and melodic. Somebody used the term almost melody for the tune that opens the Adagio and that may be accurate...but motivic treatment of a melody aids development...a melody that is too pretty and too complete can sometimes lock a composer into a developmental rut. Examples: Slow movement of Shostakovich 1...He sort of runs that melody into the ground and Borodin's famous tune from his string quartet. The question for a composer at this time and for a listener's interest is whether a composer has attained her/his own sound or idiom and do they have something interesting to say...To me there is not a question of tonality or doing something completely original...or music of the past versus new music...we all live in the continuous present where every listener has the ability to relive the entire history of classical music in one's lifetime. Beethoven and Bach are as relevant as Penderecki or Ligeti. What if Kurt Atterberg were the 1st classical composer you encountered and came to understand the symphony by....While it is useful to look at Western classical music from a historical perspective...seeing who was influenced by who and knowing if a composer is quoting or being influenced by a composer. Yet, I doubt most people go in such a strict order when discovering music....in fact I know they don't when it comes to pop music....There is such a thing as perspective and somebody from another planet and time who was not given to the biases of our musical canon, could come to very different conclusions about what was better, greater or more important music...In the end the most important music is the kind that speaks to you....Bach may be the greatest ever and his genius yet unequaled however he stood in a place and time where he had the advantage of being able to discover; while each generation after had more received tradition to fight through to distinguish themselves. This has gotten harder and harder. So there are thousands of composers from Bach's day to the present whose work we have not heard, or at least would not have heard but for folks like Sergio who are bringing them to light. What a great and generous thing to do for us all.
@SergioCánovasCM
@SergioCánovasCM 2 года назад
Thanks for your comment! You may want to check his ninth symphony, it sounds much more distinctive
@johnpcomposer
@johnpcomposer 2 года назад
@@SergioCánovasCM I certainly will I already had a brief list to No. 5 1st mvmt. I'm sure there is a much more distinct sense of who Atterberg is musically.
@anangryjuicebox2799
@anangryjuicebox2799 Год назад
37:11 37:22 37:54 35:13 35:04 36:29 23:21 20:29 20:50 21:50
@ronaldbwoodall2628
@ronaldbwoodall2628 3 года назад
I'm afraid that this symphony didn't overly impress me, due mainly to its' lack of memorable themes. The adagio's "almost" melody came closest to attaining distinction, but my interest waned even during this movement. Too often the symphony seemed "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing" - but then, there was that familiar tune showing up at 16:19 (why can't I remember what other work has it?) to strengthen it, and the climactic moment at 17:12 is quite effective. Also, the extended passage beginning at 24:50 is impressive and inventive, and the concluding measures of the Symphony end it in grand fashion. So after all, I really do like this Symphony a little, it seems!
@donnytello1544
@donnytello1544 3 года назад
at 16:19 I can hear rachmaninoffs 2nd in my head
@maxgregorycompositions6216
@maxgregorycompositions6216 2 года назад
Well, the symphony certainly signifies more than your criticisms do, so there's that haha!
@ronaldbwoodall2628
@ronaldbwoodall2628 2 года назад
@@maxgregorycompositions6216 I'll bet you're always good for a laugh! I do agree with you, however.
@maxgregorycompositions6216
@maxgregorycompositions6216 2 года назад
@@ronaldbwoodall2628 Lol! You’re not wrong; I am a fairly comedic person by nature. But I apologize for such a scathing rebuttal of your initial comment. It’s just so easy to critique, but much harder to actually compose a symphony, right?
@alexanderthompson2254
@alexanderthompson2254 2 года назад
Good assessment Ronald, and one I concur with. I'm just discovering Atterberg's work and I definitely think there's potentially a really good composer to be found here, but none of it is *quite* as brilliant as I'd hoped (from what I've heard thus far). I will certainly keep listening though. Your comments about that second movement having a great "almost melody" is spot on. SO close to deliciousness! However, I do like the second movement of his 4th Symphony a lot, with its dolorous, grace-note-addled folk melody for woodwinds and bleating, yearning strings - an attractive, crepuscular-sounding bit of music. Do give that one a listen if you haven't yet!
@katjao.h.321
@katjao.h.321 2 года назад
02:09, 03:22, 05:19, 08:15, 14:56, 38:58 spanish much?
@SergioCánovasCM
@SergioCánovasCM 2 года назад
You mean that those parts sound Spanish? If so, not really.
@katjao.h.321
@katjao.h.321 2 года назад
@@SergioCánovasCM Which part of the world do you think Atterberg got inspiration from when he wrote that part?
@SergioCánovasCM
@SergioCánovasCM 2 года назад
@@katjao.h.321 I don't think he was inspired by any particular kind of foreign music, except the German romantics, who had a great ammount of influence in his music.
@katjao.h.321
@katjao.h.321 2 года назад
@@SergioCánovasCM hm, I guess we disagree there. We all draw inspiration from different composers and different cultures, it is inevitable. No one wakes up one day and composes completely new music ;) From my personal experience, I hear a lot of Swedish folk, German (like you said), Russian and in this particular piece Spanish or Mexican (not to sure exactly which country) musical inspiration that is embedded in Atterbergs music
@TJ.Turner
@TJ.Turner Год назад
I can't spot any Latin influences in any of the parts you mentioned. Does it remind you of a specific composer?