Symphony No. 7 (Dvořák)

Title page of the score of Dvořák's seventh symphony, with portrait of Hans von Bülow

Antonín Dvořák's Symphony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70, B. 141, was completed on 17 March 1885 and first performed on 22 April 1885 at St James's Hall in London. It was originally published as Symphony No. 2.

Compositional structure

  1. Allegro maestoso
  2. Poco adagio in F major
  3. Scherzo: Vivace – Poco meno mosso
  4. Finale: Allegro

The work, approximately 40 minutes in length, is scored for an orchestra of 2 flutes (2nd doubling piccolo in the 3rd movement), 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (in A and B), 2 bassoons, 4 horns (in D and F), 2 trumpets (in C, D, and F), 3 trombones, timpani and strings.

Composition history

Dvořák's work on the symphony began on 13 December 1884. Dvořák had heard and admired Brahms's new 3rd Symphony, and this prompted him to think of writing of a new symphony himself. So it was fortuitous that in that same year the London Philharmonic Society invited him to write a new symphony and elected him as an honorary member. A month later, after his daily walk to the Prague railway station, he said "the first subject of my new symphony flashed in to my mind on the arrival of the festive train bringing our countrymen from Pest". The Czechs were in fact coming to the National Theatre in Prague, where there was to be a musical evening to support the political struggles of the Czech nation. He resolved that his new symphony would reflect this struggle. In doing so the symphony would also reveal something of his personal struggle in reconciling his simple and peaceful countryman's feelings with his intense patriotism and his wish to see the Czech nation flourish.

He completed a sketch of the 1st movement in five days, and he wrote to one of his friends: "I am now busy with this symphony for London, and wherever I go I can think of nothing else. God grant that this Czech music will move the world!!"

Ten days later he finished his sketch of the slow movement. He added a footnote "From the sad years". This refers to the recent death of his mother, and probably also to the previous death of his eldest child, and these events were in his mind especially in this movement. However, there is also a broader horizon—he wrote to a friend "What is in my mind is Love, God, and my Fatherland." The movement starts with intense calm and peace, but also includes turmoil and unsettled weather. He told his publisher that "there is not one superfluous note". Donald Tovey and Robert Layton have both observed that the 2nd movement, like the furiant of the 6th Symphony, shows contact with Czech sources, but Michael Beckerman suggests that the relationship "seems overpowered by the formal mastery of Dvořák's development of the ideas."[1]

In the next month or so Dvořák completed the sketches of the 3rd and 4th movements. He later said that the 4th movement includes a suggestion of the capacity of the Czech people to display stubborn resistance to political oppressors. In 1885 it received its brilliantly successful first performance at St James's Hall in London, with Dvořák himself conducting.

Despite the success of the 7th symphony, the publication of the work was a nightmare. Dvořák's contracted German publisher, Fritz Simrock, seemed to go out of his way to make difficulties and to irritate him. First, he said he could not consider publishing it until a piano duet arrangement was available. Simrock then flatly refused to print his Czech name, Antonín, on the cover—the publisher insisted that it be Anton, and that the title page be in German only. Finally, he was told that the dedication to the London Philharmonic Society would have to be omitted. During all of these prolonged arguments, Dvořák asked Simrock for an advance: "I have a lot of expense with my garden, and my potato crop isn't very good". Eventually, Simrock offered only 3000 marks for the symphony, which was a low value for such a major work. Dvořák replied that other publishers would readily pay twice as much. After further argument, Simrock grudgingly paid the 6000 marks.

Evaluation

The 7th symphony, together with the 8th and 9th, represent Dvořák at his best, and they each reveal a somewhat different aspect of his personality. The 7th is the most ambitious in structure, and the most consciously international in its message. The Dvořák specialist John Clapham writes that "without doubt" the 7th "must surely be Dvořák's greatest symphony,"[2] although elsewhere he writes that the 9th is the most popular worldwide.[3] As the 9th is so often played, Clapham in effect recommends that conductors perform, and listeners hear, also the 7th.

References

Notes

  1. Beckerman 2012, p.42
  2. Clapham 1979, p. 74
  3. Clapham 1979, pp. 132–133

Sources

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