Symphony No. 5 (Tchaikovsky)
The Symphony No. 5 in E minor, Op. 64 by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky was composed between May and August 1888 and was first performed in St Petersburg at the Mariinsky Theatre on November 18 of that year with Tchaikovsky conducting. It is dedicated to Theodor Avé-Lallemant.[1]
Structure
A typical performance of the Symphony lasts about 46 minutes. The Symphony is in four movements:
- Andante - Scherzo (Allegro con anima) (E minor - E major - E minor)
- Andante cantabile con alcuna licenza (B minor - D major) - Non allegro (D-sharp minor) - Andante maestoso con pianoso (D major)
- Valse: Allegro moderato (A major)
- Finale: Andante maestoso (E major) - Non allegro (E minor) - Presto molto furioso (E minor) - Molto assai e molto maestoso (E major) - Allegro vivace (E major)
Like the Symphony No. 4, the Fifth is a cyclical symphony, with a recurring main theme. Unlike the Fourth, however, the theme is heard in all four movements, a feature Tchaikovsky had first used in the Manfred Symphony, which was completed less than two years before the Fifth. The theme has a funereal character in the first movement, but gradually transforms into a triumphant march, which dominates the final movement. According to an entry in the composer's notebook, dated 15 April 1888 about one month before he began composition of the symphony, the composer described the introduction as "a complete resignation before fate, which is the same as the inscrutable predestination of fate." The changing character of the theme over the course of the symphony seems to imply optimism with regard to providence, an outlook that would not return in his Sixth Symphony.
Analysis
The overall trajectory of Tchaikovsky’s 5th Symphony reminds the listener of Beethoven’s 5th. To begin with, this symphony exhibits the narrative paradigm of per aspera ad astra (tragic to triumphant), which manifests as an overall tonal trajectory of e-minor to E-major. As in Beethoven’s 5th Symphony, the first movement fails to satisfy the per aspera ad astra paradigm and ends in minor mode, which allows the narrative to continue through the rest of the symphony. Although it would be inaccurate to say that the tonal plan of the first movement is directly projected onto the rest of the symphony, a similar plan can be observed:
1st movement: i → V of relative major (D-major) → i → I
The symphony: i → V of relative major (D-major) → IV → I
The motto theme is not only used as a device to unify the four movements of the symphony, but also projects the per aspera ad astra narrative on its own:
e-minor (1st mvt) → V⁷ (V4/2) of D-major (2nd mvt) →g#⁰⁷ (2nd mvt) → a-major (3rd mvt) →E-major (4th mvt) →C-major → e-minor → E major
1st movement
Themes and Motives
Primary Theme 1 (PT1), mm. 42-50
Primary Theme 2 (PT2), mm. 116-128
Subordinate Theme (ST), mm. 170-182
Motive X, mm.154-170
In the exposition of the first movement, the initial tonality (e-minor) is relatively unstable. A D-major tonality slips in and out e-minor as V of the relative major (G major), but not until mm.128-132 does one hear this as an antagonistic to e-minor. The exposition concludes in D-major after integrating part of the PT1 into its cadential moment (mm. 194-198). Motive X frames the secondary theme group by preceding the ST and reiterating D-major afterwards.
The development consists of four distinct sections. The first section exhibits a sequence based on the PT1 superimposed with motive X. This is accompanied by a bass line that diatonically descends over an octave and a fifth. The second section develops the head motive from PT1. The shifting meter (from 6/8 to 3/4), and diminished sonority (m. 261 for example) adds to growing instability. The third section is a brief allusion to the PT2, interrupted by a fugato based on PT1. Motive X returns strongly and insistently in m. 285, going back and forth between g-minor and d-minor. This can be interpreted as an effort to re-establish sonority in D. The re-transition to recapitulation is rather abrupt, yet a clever use of common tone modulation can be observed.
The recapitulation of this movement follows the convention of sonata form.
2nd movement
Themes
Theme A1: 1st horn
Theme A2: violin
Theme B: clarinet in A
The second movement begins with the continuation of the tragic sonority in b-minor, as if the movement will be in the minor dominant of the tonic of the symphony. Instead, a common tone modulation leads to a D-major theme first introduced by a solo horn.
This movement is in a standard ternary form with A section in D-major, B section alluding to F♯ minor, then a restatement of the A section with different orchestration. Compared to the stable A section, the B section exhibits instability in many ways. For example, the theme begins and remains in V7/F♯ minor, even though it could be easily resolved to F♯ minor. Moreover, the segmentation of a theme, fugato texture, and rapid shift of hyper meter contributes to the instability of this section.
In this movement, the motto theme appears twice: from mm.99-103 as a structural dominant preparing the return of the A section, and in the coda (mm.158-166) in G#7. One could interpret this as a preparation for I6, but also as a structural leading tone to the next movement (G#7→ A), especially since the unwinding from the climactic restatement of the motto theme occurs relatively hesitantly and what follows seems to diminish away.
3rd movement
Themes
Waltz 1:
Waltz 2: ob 1.
Waltz 3:
Trio:
The third movement is a relatively ordinary waltz. Some elements of absurdity can be observed, for example, hemiola and unbalanced phrase structure at the outset of the movement. These elements take over the movement in the trio section, which is a scherzo. The scherzo theme initially played by the first violins can be seen as a superimposition of 4/4 over 3/4. Hemiola is used again as a transitional technique (mm. 97-105). The waltz returns, but with the texture from the scherzo.
The return of the motto theme in the 3rd movement, preceded by a waltz in a major mode, strikes the listener as reminiscent of the tragic opening of the symphony, although perhaps in a ridiculed manner by integrating hemiola, a light-hearted character displayed everywhere in the movement.
4th movement
Themes
PT1: vl 1.
PT2:
ST:
As in the first movement, the exposition of the last movement begins in e-minor, and the D-major sonority struggles to establish itself. Unlike the first movement, this struggle manifests in brief tonicization of D-major, as well as V7 of D-major (mm. 86-90, mm. 106-114). The first attempt to resolve the accumulation of conflict (key oppositions, increasing harmonic rhythm, segmentation, and rapid changes of themes) takes place in m. 172 with the re-introduction of the motto theme in the wrong key (C-major).
The development is very brief, lasting about 60 measures. In the recapitulation, a new melody is superimposed over the PT1 texture. This melody, however new, exhibits characteristics of PT 2 (contour, initial succession of notes, and a chordal texture used elsewhere in the symphony) so that it does not necessarily strike the listener as a new theme. This new melody never returns.
The 6th statement of the motto theme is in e-minor, leading to an emphatic Perfect Authentic Cadence (PAC) in B major. It is perhaps unusual to see a PAC in the dominant of the home key at the end of the recapitulation; however, this could be interpreted on a larger level as a half cadence preparing for an even stronger return of the tonic. Following such preparation, the coda succeeds in re-emphasizing the tonic, using different themes and many cadences in tonic. Some of the themes used here are the motto theme (m. 474), the countermelody to PT1 (m. 474, superimposed to the motto theme), PT2 (m. 504), and PT1 from the first movement of the symphony.
Critical reaction
Some critics, including Tchaikovsky himself, have considered the ending insincere or even crude. After the second performance, Tchaikovsky wrote, "I have come to the conclusion that it is a failure". Despite this, the symphony has gone on to become one of the composer's most popular works. The second movement, in particular, is considered to be classic Tchaikovsky: well crafted, colorfully orchestrated, and with a memorable melody for solo horn.
Possibly for its very clear exposition of the idea of "ultimate victory through strife", the Fifth was very popular during World War II, with many new recordings of the work, and many performances during those years. One of the most notable performances was by the Leningrad Radio Symphony Orchestra during the Siege of Leningrad. City leaders had ordered the orchestra to continue its performances to keep the spirits high in the city. On the night of October 20, 1941 they played Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 5 at the city's Philharmonic Hall and it was broadcast live to London. As the second movement began, bombs started to fall nearby, but the orchestra continued playing until the final note. Since the war it has remained very popular, but has been somewhat eclipsed in popularity by the Fourth and Sixth Symphonies.
Critical reaction to the work was mixed, with some enthusiasm in Russia. Berezovsky wrote, "The Fifth Symphony is the weakest of Tchaikovsky's symphonies, but nevertheless it is a striking work, taking a prominent place not only among the composer's output but among Russian works in general. ... the entire symphony seems to spring from some dark spiritual experience."
On the symphony's first performance in the United States, critical reaction, especially in Boston, was almost unanimously hostile. A reviewer for the Boston Evening Transcript, October 24, 1892, wrote:
- "Of the Fifth Tchaikovsky Symphony one hardly knows what to say ... In the Finale we have all the untamed fury of the Cossack, whetting itself for deeds of atrocity, against all the sterility of the Russian steppes. The furious peroration sounds like nothing so much as a horde of demons struggling in a torrent of brandy, the music growing drunker and drunker. Pandemonium, delirium tremens, raving, and above all, noise worse confounded!"
The reception in New York was little better. A reviewer for the Musical Courier, March 13, 1889, wrote:
- "In the Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony ... one vainly sought for coherency and homogeneousness ... in the last movement, the composer's Calmuck blood got the better of him, and slaughter, dire and bloody, swept across the storm-driven score."
Uses of the symphony
The 5th symphony was used in 1933 by the Russian-born choreographer Léonide Massine for the first symphonic ballet, Les Présages. Musical purists objected to the use of a serious symphonic work for a ballet.
Passages from this symphony were used in the 1937 motion picture Maytime, starring Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy. The music appears not only in some of the background score, but also in the form of a sung pastiche invented by Herbert Stothart as a fictitious French opera entitled Czaritsa, composed by the character Trentini for the lead soprano (MacDonald).
It is alleged that a fragment of the "fate" theme, as it appears in its final key (E major) at the end of the finale, is quoted in its relative minor (C# minor) by Dmitri Shostakovich in his Leningrad Symphony in the "invasion" theme of the first movement. This is supposed to mean that the destructive force is of Russian origin, and so the underlying message in the Leningrad is as much anti-Stalin as anti-Hitler. However, this assertion is virtually impossible to substantiate in practice.
The second movement was featured in the film Lucas (1986).
Part of the second movement was given English lyrics under the title Moon Love, recorded by Glenn Miller and Chet Baker among others. An instrumental arrangement was recorded by George Greeley on his 1960 Warner Bros. album, Popular Piano Concertos of the World's Great Love Themes (LP).
It is said that Annie's Song by John Denver was based in part by the first horn theme in the second movement. Annie's Song is also in D major, and when Denver sang it in Russian in a 1985 concert, the first five notes of the Russian portion of the song and the theme share the same rhythm.[2]
An arrangement of the second movement was used in a prominent 1970s Australian advertisement for Winfield cigarettes,[3] with the slogan Anyhow, have a Winfield sung by a choir to the movement's central theme. The ads were presented by Paul Hogan, who also used the arrangement as the theme for his Australian comedy show.
Instrumentation
The work is scored for 3 flutes (3rd doubling piccolo), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in A, 2 bassoons, 4 horns in F, 2 trumpets in A, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, and strings.
References
- ↑ "Tchaikovsky Research". Retrieved September 26, 2011.
- ↑ John Denver, Live in the U.S.S.R. [CD Two, Track 9] released in 2007 by AAO Music
- ↑ "Winfield theme [music] / an arrangement by Waldo De Los Rios of Tchaikovsky theme used by Winfield Cigarettes", National Library of Australia.
Sources
- Review by Bogdanov-Berezovsky, paraphrased from The Symphonies of Brahms and Tschaikowsky in Score, Bonanza Books, New York, 1935.
- Newspaper reviews quoted in Nicolas Slonimsky, The Lexicon of Musical Invective. Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1965. ISBN 0-295-78579-9
- Hans Keller: 'Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky', in Vol. I of 'The Symphony', ed. Robert Simpson (Harmondsworth, 1966).
- The Symphony be Michael Steinberg, Oxford University Press 1995
External links
- Maytime at the Internet Movie Database
- Tchaikovsky Research
- Listen online from BBC Radio 3 website
- Symphony No. 5: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Symphony No. 5 in HD on YouTube
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