Symphony in F major (Saint-Saëns)

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Symphony in F Major
Urbs Roma
by Camille Saint-Saëns
File:Camille Saint-Saëns in 1893.jpg
Key F Major
Period Romantic
Genre Symphony
Composed 1856 (1856)
Published 1974 (1974)
Duration 40 minutes
Movements 4
Scoring Symphony Orchestrea
Premiere
Date February 15, 1857 (1857-02-15)
Location Conservatoire de Paris
Conductor Jules Pasdeloup

Symphony in F major, by Camille Saint-Saëns is a symphonic work originally published under the title "Urbs Roma". The symphony was composed in 1856 and premiered the next year at the Conservatoire de Paris under Jules Pasdeloup. It would not see publication until 1974.[1]

Background

The work was originally submitted under the title of "Urbs Roma" (the city of rome) for a competition in Bordeaux. The competition, which Saint-Saëns won, was intended as a starting point for young composers .The composer did not leave a program or other description that indicates how the music related to its title.[2]

The work was buried by Saint-Saëns, who never published it during his lifetime and left it out of his own catalogue. This resulted in the work never receiving an opus number.[2][3]

The theme of the slow third movement was reused in the composer's L'Assassinat du duc de Guise.[4]

Structure

The work consists of four movements:[1][5]

  1. Largo - Allegro
  2. Molto vivace (A minor)
  3. Moderato, assai serioso (F minor)
  4. Poco allegretto

Characteristics

The work opens in a slow, somber tone before transitioning to an allegro section. The first movement is constructed unusually, moving twice between Largo and Allegro. This is similar to the construction of Symphony in D Minor by César Franck that was composed 30 years later. The second movement is a scherzo that resembles a spring round dance. The third movement is a funeral march that is described as a "funeral march for the death of an Empire". The final movement is a theme and variations that takes a nostalgic tone and fluctuates between meters.[5][6][7]

Symphony in F major is the longest of Saint-Saëns's symphonies, with a total runtime of 40 minutes.[1][4]

References

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External links