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Simple Symphony

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Composition by Benjamin Britten
For the symphony byCarl Nielsen, seeSymphony No. 6 (Nielsen).

TheSimple Symphony, Op. 4, is a work forstring orchestra orstring quartet byBenjamin Britten.It was written between December 1933 and February 1934 inLowestoft, using material that the composer had written as a child, between 1923 and 1926. It received its first performance in 1934 at Stuart Hall inNorwich, with Britten conducting an amateur orchestra.

The piece is dedicated to Audrey Alston (Mrs Lincolne Sutton), Britten's childhood viola teacher.The piece is based on eight themes which Britten wrote during his childhood (two per movement) and for which he had a particular fondness. He completed his final draft of this piece at age twenty.[1]

Instrumentation

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  • 1st violins
  • 2nd violins
  • Violas
  • Cellos
  • Double basses

Borrowed themes

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The symphony has four movements, each quoting themes from two earlier works by Britten:

I. Boisterous Bourrée
– Suite No. 1 in E for piano (18 October 1925), second movement (Bourrée: Allegro vivace)
– Song (Song) (1923) A Country Dance ('Now the King is home again'), text from Tennyson's The Foresters, for voice and piano.
II. Playful Pizzicato
– Scherzo (piano) (1924) Sonata for piano in B flat major, op. 5, Scherzo and Trio (Molto vivace)
– Song (1924) The Road Song of the "Bandar-Log" ('Here we go in a flung festoon', text by Rudyard Kipling), for voice and piano.
III. Sentimental Sarabande
– Suite No. 3 (for piano) (1925) Suite No. 3, in F minor, for piano, op. 25, Prelude (Allegro di molto)
– Waltz for piano (1923) [Waltz in B major for piano], (Tempo di valse)
IV. Frolicsome Finale
– Piano Sonata No. 9 (1926) Piano Sonata No. 9, in C minor, op. 38, Finale
– Song (1925)

The entire piece lasts about 20 minutes. The pizzicato in the second movement makes it popular with mandolin players. Prominent in this popular theme are eight notes which sound familiar as echoing the opening of "Barwick Green", the theme music to the long-running BBC Radio 4 programme, "The Archers", written in 1924 by Arthur Wood. The third movement samples a traditional Swedish melody heard also in the popular Christian hymn “How Great Thou Art”.

Later uses

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In 1944, the choreographerWalter Gore created a ballet also entitledSimple Symphony for theBallet Rambert.[2]

Many themes of the symphony are also used for the soundtrackBad Blood (1986) byLeos Carax. It appears inWes Anderson's filmMoonrise Kingdom (2012), which prominently features many pieces by Britten. It also appears in the first two seasons ofThe Marvelous Mrs. Maisel (2017-2018).

References

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  1. ^"Benjamin Britten : Simple Symphony, Op. 4". Chester Novello. Retrieved29 December 2011.
  2. ^Potter, Michelle."'Simple Symphony': Walter Gore".Michelle Potter On Dancing. Retrieved4 January 2014.
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