Chamber Symphony

Chamber Symphony is a 1992 composition for a 15-member chamber orchestra by American composer John Adams, inspired by Arnold Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony No. 1, Op. 9. It is a three-movement work that takes 23 minutes to perform.[1]

History

It was commissioned by the Gerbode Foundation of San Francisco for the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, but premiered by the Schoenberg Ensemble in The Hague, the Netherlands, on 17 January 1993. The commissioners gave the American premiere on 12 April 1993.[1]The composer describes his inspiration:

I originally set out to write a children's piece, and my intentions were to sample the voices of children and work them into a fabric of acoustic and electronic instruments. But before I began that project I had another one of those strange interludes that often lead to a new piece. This one involved a brief moment of what Melville called "the shock of recognition": I was sitting in my studio, studying the score to Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony, and as I was doing so I became aware that my seven year old son Sam was in the adjacent room watching cartoons (good cartoons, old ones from the '50's). The hyperactive, insistently aggressive and acrobatic scores for the cartoons mixed in my head with the Schoenberg music, itself hyperactive, acrobatic and not a little aggressive, and I realized suddenly how much these two traditions had in common.

Chamber Symphony was first recorded with the London Sinfonietta, conducted by the composer, in 1994.[2] More recently, the Aurora Orchestra recorded the piece on its album Road Trip, along with pieces from Aaron Copland and Charles Ives and arrangements of traditional and popular American works.[3]

Scoring

The instrumentation is similar to that of Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony No. 1, with the addition of synthesizer, percussion, trumpet, and trombone.[4] The composer describes the piece as "shockingly difficult to play ... [since] instruments are asked to negotiate unreasonably difficult passages and alarmingly fast tempi, often to the inexorable click of the trap set." Adams thought the first movement so difficult that he entitled it Discipliner et Punire.[1] As finally published, however, the movements are:
I. Mongrel Airs
II. Aria with Walking Bass
III. Roadrunner

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Adams, John. "John Adams - Chamber Symphony". Boosey & Hawkes. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  2. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000005IZR. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  3. Huizenga, Tom (31 January 2015). "Bach, Brits And A Bodacious Boston Orchestra: New Classical Albums". NPR. Retrieved 20 February 2015.
  4. Kirzinger, Robert. "Virtuosity’s Velocity | Program Notes". Retrieved 20 February 2015.