Havergal Brian - Gothic Symphony (Symphony No. 1) (1/10)

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Uploaded by on Sep 21, 2010

Symphony No. 1 in D minor, "The Gothic" (1919-1927)

Part I
Movement I: Allegro assai

According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the Gothic Symphony is the largest symphony ever written - larger even than Mahler's Eighth (Symphony of a Thousand). It is the first symphony by British composer William "Havergal" Brian (1876-1972), a contemporary of Granville Bantock, Ralph Vaughan Williams and William Walton. Over the course of his long life, Brian composed 32 symphonies - 8 of them while he was in his nineties. For most of his life, Brian's music was neglected and fell into obscurity, apart from two fruitful periods when he received wider recognition: before the First World War, when Thomas Beecham championed Brian's music, and for a short time in the 1960's when his many symphonies were rediscovered. Unfortunately, I'm afraid that much of his oeuvre has slipped back into obscurity since then.

The Gothic Symphony lasts just under two hours and requires extravagant forces:

- Woodwind: 2 piccolos, 6 flutes (1 doubling alto flute), 6 oboes (1 doubling oboe d'amore 1 doubling bass oboe), 2 cors anglais, clarinet in E-flat, 5 clarinets in B-flat (1 doubling 2nd E-flat clarinet), 2 basset horns, 2 bass clarinets in B-flat, contrabass clarinet in B-flat, 3 bassoons, 2 contrabassoons

- Orchestral brass: 8 horns in F, 8 trumpets (2 doubling cornets in E-flat), bass trumpet, 3 tenor trombones, bass trombone (doubling 2nd contrabass trombone), contrabass trombone, 2 euphoniums, 2 tubas

- Percussion: 2 sets of timpani, 2 bass drums, 2 (preferably 3) snare drums, African long drum, 2 tambourines, 2 triangles, 6 pairs of large cymbals, gong, bird scare, thunder machine, small chains, xylophone, glockenspiel, tubular bells, chimes in E-flat

- Keyboards: celesta, organ

- Voices: solo quartet (soprano, alto, tenor, and bass), 4 mixed choirs, children's choir

- Four offstage brass bands—used only in the fifth and sixth movements and each comprising: 2 horns, 2 trumpets, 2 tenor trombones, 2 tubas, 1 set of timpani

- Strings: 2 harps (preferably more ad lib.), 20 first violins, 20 second violins, 16 violas, 14 cellos, 12 double basses

The first part of the symphony is purely orchestral, while the second involves multiple choirs in a setting of the Latin hymn "Te Deum." Brian worked on the symphony for eight years and submitted it to the Columbia Gramaphone Competition in 1928, but it lost the top prize to Kurt Atterberg's Sixth Symphony. The first movement of Part I is in extended sonata form, with a lively figure in D minor as the first theme, and a calm violin melody in D flat major as the second theme. Following the development section, there is no formal recapitulation, but rather a final coda. The second movement is a solemn march, almost funerary in character. The third movement is built up from a Brucknerian recurring ostinato, introduced by the horn section, and it leads up to a xylophone cadenza culminating in a march that brings the tonality back to the key of D minor. Part I ends with a D major chord. Part II of the Gothic is notable for its use of Renaissance polyphony, polytonality, dissonance and medieval compositional techniques. The orchestra is expanded and the choirs and brass bands are brought in. In the three movements of Part II, the text of the Te Deum is treated sometimes tenderly, sometimes raucously, sometimes homophonically, sometimes polyphonically and with many other creative approaches. In the end, the choir closes the work softly in the key of E major.

Performers -

Soprano: Eva Jenisová
Alto: Dagmar Pecková
Bass: Vladimir Doležal
Tenor: Peter Mikuláš
Chorus-master: Pavol Procházka
Conductor: Ondrej Lenard
Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra, Bratislava
Slovak Opera Chorus
Folk Ensemble Chorus
Lucnica Chorus
Bratislava City Choir
Bratislava Children's Choir
Youth Echo Choir

Te Deum Text:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Te_Deum#Latin_and_English_text

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Uploader Comments (musicanth)

  • Oh you timely devil of an uploader! I have only just f***n heard of this monster - and there you are, freshly put up, the whole thing, a mere 13hrs ago. Brilliant . Me hugely grateful!

  • @walteredstates I'm glad you like this monster :)

Top Comments

  • 17 July - Royal Albert Hall. Be there.

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All Comments (44)

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  • @musicanth Painting name?

  • What an astonishing achievement this is!!!!

  • Fantastic music! BTW does anyone know what the painting's called in the vid?

  • @musicanth did one myself... (it seems youtube wont let me publish links on comments, so i sent it as a personal message to you)

    if you've done one too, maybe you could paste it on the video info

    thanks agains! :D

  • @musicanth did you make a playlist of them all?

  • @musicanth Me very grateful too!

  • @farrtube Hi there! Just to correct your facts: 1st performance of 'The Gothic' under Bryan Fairfax on 24 June 1961; 1st performance of Symphony No. 18 (1961) on 26 February 1962; 1st professional performance of 'The Gothic' under Sir Adrian Boult on 30 October 1966; 1st radio performance of Symphony No. 18 under Bryan Fairfax on 20 October 1974.

  • @IzzyJiagu Yep me too

  • @lilplinky It was an awesome moment when all 800 members of the choir stood up to sing, gives me goose bumps just thinking of it!

  • @wigs666 I was there, amazing it was too!

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