Antonin Dvorak. Symphony 5(9). Analysis by Gerard Schwarz (Mov.2)발음듣기
Antonin Dvorak. Symphony 5(9). Analysis by Gerard Schwarz (Mov.2)
What's interesting about the second movement one of the many things interesting is that it's marked "largo."발음듣기
And very often it would be played as the largo from the New World Symphony because it's such a famous melody and everyone knows this melody.발음듣기
It began as an andante. An andante is a faster tempo, and so he envisioned this as a fast as he was writing it.발음듣기
And then, he thought "well maybe that's not correct, "maybe it should be a little slower," so he wrote larghetto.발음듣기
It was premiered by the New York Philharmonic at Carnegie Hall 1893 and Anton Seidl, a very great conductor, did it quite slowly.발음듣기
Interesting to see how a great artist, a great conductor like Seidl, could influence a great composer like Dvorak.발음듣기
Horns, trumpet, trombone and tuba. At the end of these few bars it makes a decrescendo and the strings take over playing the exact same chord.발음듣기
It is one of the most beautiful solos and many people believe that it's influenced by Negro spirituals.발음듣기
(slow brass classical music) (timpani pounding) (slow brass classical music) (slow violin music) (English horn solo) At the end of this statement of the beautiful melody of the English horn, that opening corral is repeated.발음듣기
(slow, high flute music) (flute and horn music) The woodwinds finish their chord, the brass come in playing the same chord fortissimo, then make a decrescendo and the strings remain singing that same exact chord very softly, and then they play.발음듣기
(slow brass chord) (moves into slow violin music) The English horn comes back and plays it again.발음듣기
(slow to mid-tempo flute and oboe music) The second theme is then extended by a beautiful clarinet duet.발음듣기
This is very heartfelt, gorgeous music played very poignantly and very softly, primarily by the strings.(soft string instruments) Then this leads to yet another theme.발음듣기
It starts with the oboe, then the clarinet, then the flute, then the violins, then the cellos and the basses.발음듣기
(lively woodwind instruments) So here you have this kind of light that enters this work and then what happens?발음듣기
The trombones come in in an ominous way playing the first theme from the first movement, the horn theme, slower.발음듣기
The trumpets play a fanfare version of the English horn solo that we had just heard and the strings play the third theme from the first movement.발음듣기
It's hard to keep track of which numbered theme it is, but if you just listen to the trombones playing one theme, the trumpets playing another and the violins playing another and see how it all fits together.발음듣기
(slow English horn solo) The English horn solo then is extended by 10 solo string players, four violins, two violas, two cellos and two basses.발음듣기
He plays a little bit of this beautiful theme very softly and poignantly, and then there's a stop.발음듣기
And then he reduces it to just three players, a solo violin, a solo viola, and a solo cello.발음듣기
Then, the full string section comes in and it brings us back to the corral that opened the movement.발음듣기
It's hard to imagine if anyone before this time had ever written something where a trio of double basses or three voices of double basses, would end a symphonic movement.발음듣기
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