Symphony No. 2 (Szymanowski) Explained

Karol Szymanowski completed his Symphony No. 2 in B-flat major, Op. 19 in 1909 at the age of 27. Szymanowski was greatly influenced by German culture and the symphony has many echoes of Richard Strauss and Max Reger. This symphony introduced Szymanowski to Europe in 1911-12, following its Warsaw premiere on 7 April 1911 and it was heard in Berlin, Leipzig and Vienna. The symphony was published soon after the composer's death after much revision. This symphony and its use of a solo violin laid the foundation, so to speak, of Szymanowski's first Violin Concerto. A typical performance of the symphony lasts about 30 minutes.[1] [2]

Form

The symphony is supposed to show off the composer's prowess as a contrapuntalist. The work unconventional for its time, is in two movements and begins in a typical Szymanowski manner (also with a similarity to Scriabin) with a violin solo:[1]

Instrumentation

Szymanowski scored his symphony for a large orchestra consisting of standard instruments:[3]

Woodwind
  • 3 Flutes
  • 3 Oboes or
  • (2 Oboes and 1 Cor anglais)
  • 2 Clarinets in B
  • 1 B and 1 E Clarinet or
  • (1 Bass Clarinet)
  • 3 Bassoons
    Brass
  • 4 Horns in F
  • 3 Trumpets in B
  • 3 Trombones
  • Tuba
    Percussion
  • Perc(3)
  • Harp
    Strings
  • 1st and 2nd Violins
  • Violas
  • Cellos
  • Contra basses

    Evaluation

    Conductor Antoni Wit deems the symphony a very challenging work, explaining that when he is asked to conduct it he replies that the orchestra won't have it easy and the performance will require more work than usual and each musician to prepare its part before the rehearsals, but that nevertheless it will be worth it.[4]

    Notes and References

    1. Palmer, Christopher (CD booklet insert: Szymanowki-Symphonies Nos. 2 & 3; Bartok-Two Pictures, Detroit Symphony Orchestra conducted by Antal Dorati, Decca, Catalogue# 425625-2)
    2. International Music Score Library Project (imslp.org)
    3. Web site: Universal Edition AG. 11 June 2012.
    4. http://scherzo.es/hemeroteca/2015-07-309.pdf Antoni Wit: "Creo que cada vez lo hago un poco mejor". Scherzo, July-August 2015