This 4th Symphony was most probably created on 24 February 1857 at the Société des concerts du Conservatoire, as they announced as part of the programm a “new symphony” by Reber. The previous ones were given for the first time in the 1840s in the same context at the Concerts of the Sainte-Cécile Society. As the critics of that time and Saint-Saëns stressed it, Reber was one of the few French composers of his time to have an interest in the symphony genre. He managed to come to a synthesis of the German and French tastes and showed his attachement to Mozart and Beethoven, his “favorite masters” according to Saint-Saëns. From a point of view of character, there is a real impetus animating the whole symphony, whose fluency in the development of ideas shows the utimate musical identity of the composer. The main theme of this, his final, symphony is one of striking simplicity. The debt to Beethoven makes itself felt, too, in the abrupt changes of colour and the aptly heroic style of the motif. The second movement, in C minor, is reminiscent of Mozart with the role given to the clarinet and the chamber music atmosphere of the soli. In this second movement, there is a rather subtle quotation of the main theme of the last movement of the Piano Trio op. 1 no 3 by Beethoven. After an energetic scherzo, the symphony ends in a joyful and virtuoso finale in the main key tone. The theme is played pp by entrances in imitation between the different instruments of the string quartet before being joigned by the whole orchestra in a triumphant tutti.
under the scientific guidance of
Anne-Sylvie Barthel-Calvet,
(department of Music and Musicology of
UFR Arts Lettres et Langues-Metz, Université de Lorraine)
(translation Philippe Do)
Sommaire
I. Allegro ||
II. Andantino sostenuto ||
III. Scherzo : allegro ||
IV. Final : allegro ||
Marie-Aude Roux, Le Monde.fr
- ISMN: 9790231805932 (M231805932)