The Symphony in G minor was Édouard Lalo’s final original orchestral composition. It was composed in 1885-1886. (There were two earlier symphonies composed by Lalo, believed destroyed). It was premiered on 7 February 1887 in Paris at the Concerts Lamoureux under Charles Lamoureux.
It is a classically constructed romantic symphony with the composer’s Latin roots present in the melodies and orchestration. There are four movements with 28 minutes duration:
Instrumentation is two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani and strings. The full score was published by G. Hartmann in 1888, and brought out as a Heugel et Cie imprint in 1900 as plate 1820 (Heugel having purchased Hartmann in 1891). Xavier Leroux also made a four hand piano version, published by Heugel as plate 1795.
In a letter of 7 March 1887 to author and Wagner enthusiast Adolphe Jullien responding for information on the symphony, Lalo stated his belief in pure music over descriptive music:
“It appears that you personally wish to have some information regarding the thought which predominates in my symphony. Alas, I am going to scandalize you! I had no literary thought in the sense that you mean. When I write a composition to words, I become a slave to what convention terms the verities of musical expression, according to a given text. But when I write music without a literary text, I have before and about me only the domain of sounds, melodic and harmonic. For a musician, this immense field possesses in itself, aside from all literature, its poems and its dramas. As to my Symphony, I have presented the master phrase in a brief introduction, as you have been kind enough to remark; it predominates in the first movement, and I recall it in the others whenever my poetic or dramatic musical intentions (do not laugh!) make its intervention seem necessary to me”.
A 1961 review of the first major recording (Beecham’s made in 1959 at the Salle Wagram in Paris) disparaged the composition as "not very rewarding. Both matter and manner are dull and undistinguished, without the sparkle and melodic charm of the popular Symphonie Espagnole". A 1976 review of Antonio de Almeida’s recording suggests that "the cyclic theme does bear an unfortunately close resemblance to the opening of the BrahmsB-flat Piano Concerto, in a way that Lalo surely did not intend". This review finds the second movement the most cohesive of the four and "wonderfully scored", suggesting Bizet'sSymphony in C as the "closest equivalent".
Discography
Conductor
Orchestra
Recorded
George Sebastian
Orchestra des Concerts Colonne
1953?
Thomas Beecham
Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française
1959
Antonio de Almeida
Orchestre National de l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo
1974
Yondani Butt
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
1989?
Giancarlo Andretta
Basler Sinfonie-Orchester
1994
Nikos Athinäos
Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt
1995
Kees Bakels
Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra
2001
References
Hussey, Dyneley “Gramophone Records” The Musical Times, Vol. 102, No. 1419 (May, 1961), p. 293.
Mueller, Kate Hevner. Twenty-Seven Major American Symphony Orchestras: A History and Analysis of Their Repertoire Seasons 1842-43 through 1969-70. Indiana University Press, 1973. p. 198.
Nichols, Roger “Lalo Symphony in G Minor” The Musical Times, Vol. 117, No. 1603 (September, 1976), p. 747
Tiersot, Julien and Frederick H. Martens “Edouard Lalo” The Musical Quarterly, vol. 11 no. 1, January 1925, pages 8–35.
Further reading
Deruchie, Andrew. 2013. The French Symphony at the Fin de Siècle. New York: University of Rochester Press. ISBN978-1-58046-382-9. Chapter 3.