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Symphony Nº 100 G major

Haydn Joseph | Jansons Mariss

Información del vídeo musical:

Duración:
25m 54s
Título en Youtube:
Haydn Symphony Nº 103 H. I:100 G major "Military" "Militär"
Descripción en Youtube:
Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Mariss Jansons The work is in standard four movement form and scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, timpani, triangle, cymbals, bass drum and strings. In several editions there is only one flute. Adagio; Allegro, 2/2 Allegretto, 2/2 in C major Menuetto: Moderato, 3/4 Presto, 6/8 Written in 1794 during his second stay in London (1794/95), the Military Symphony was one of his greatest London achievements from beginning on, if not one of Joseph Haydn’s most popular compositions ever. It takes its name from the instrumentation (big kettle drums, cymbals, triangle) Haydn intends for the second and fourth movement and is one of the most prominent artistic documents of the fact that European music more or less owes the Turkish Wars for its percussion instruments, which are attributed to the music of the Janissaries (the Turkish military elite). The popularity which the Military Symphony continually enjoyed is double-edged, for the effect on which it is based is really a composed shock. The entire symphony was written “around” the second movement, which already existed in an earlier version: it originates, namely, from the third of the Five Concertos for Two “Lire organizzate” (Hob. VIIH:1-5) which Haydn composed in 1786 for King Ferdinand IV of Naples, where it is called Romance. (The lire organizzate, which is an “organised” hurdy-gurdy including pipes and bellows, is an unusual instrument originating from the Middle Ages, the strings of which are passed over a rosined wheel). But at the end of this movement Haydn added something utterly surprising: he sounds a military signal in the trumpet which is followed by the full entry of “military music” in fortissimo. Haydn – a Shostakovich of the 18th century: with a drastic force unparalleled in the music of the Viennese Classic the violence of war befalling a peaceful idyll is reproduced here in the medium of music. Haydn provided no warning of it to his listeners: the first movement is merry and light, almost cheery. (It has often been said the secondary theme of the first movement is a predecessor to the Radetzky March). With the remaining movements Haydn likely found a popular key which hit the nerve of the time: with the six-eight time of the final movement’s principal theme we have the interesting case of Haydn’s symphonic theme becoming English folk melody, as collections of country dances from the beginning of the 19th century prove. But when the military music with all its cacophony returns in the fourth movement, it has lost its threatening image and enhances the effect of the final close. Haydn and war: Haydn uses the instrumentation of the Turkish Janissaries, but it is no longer the Ottoman threat from the beginning of the 18th century on, rather a new aggressor on which Haydn’s military musical trick must be drawn in historical terms: that Haydn specifically uses a concerto of lyres for the Neapolitan King bec