Symphony No. 4 (Sessions)

The Symphony No. 4 of Roger Sessions was composed in 1958.[1]

It has three movements:

  1. Burlesque
  2. Elegy[2]
  3. Pastorale[3]

It was commissioned by the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra for the Minnesota Centennial, and premiered by the Minnesota Orchestra conducted by Antal Doráti [4] on January 2, 1960.[5]

The second movement's basically slow tempo is interrupted twice by faster episodes. This movement was intended as an elegy for the composer's brother, John, who died in 1948.[6] The finale, also slow, increases in intensity towards its close.[7] Andrea Olmstead describes all of Sessions's symphonies as "serious" and "funereal".[8]

Discography

References

  1. The last page of the score as published is signed with the date of completion.
  2. Opening of Elegy is quoted as example 6 in Imbrie. Imbrie, Andrew (1972). "The Symphonies of Roger Sessions". Tempo (New Series) (Cambridge University Press) (103): 24–32. ISSN 0040-2982. JSTOR 943951. OCLC 1767255.
  3. Marks Music Corporation 1963 score.
  4. Helm, Everett (May 1960). "Reports from Abroad". Musical Times (Musical Times Publications Ltd.) 101 (1407): 316–7. ISSN 0027-4666. OCLC 53165808.
  5. "Roger Sessions: Compositions". Retrieved 23 May 2009.
  6. Prausnitz (2002), Roger Sessions: how a "difficult" composer got that way at Google Books; p. 281; Steinberg, Choral masterworks at Google Books, p. 253.
  7. Badea's recording on New World; Marks Music score.
  8. Olmstead, Andrea (2012). Roger Sessions: A Biography, p.356. Routledge. ISBN 9781135868925.

Further reading

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