The form of the symphony, along with those of its predecessors, owes a great debt to the symphonies of Sibelius.[1] A second influence came from Renaissance architecture, particularly the churches of Filippo Brunelleschi. Davies explains that his use of Fibonacci numbers to proportion the symphony was modelled directly on Brunelleschi's structures.[2]
Lento – Adagio – Andante – Moderato – Allegretto – Allegro moderato – Allegro – Allegro alla breve
Scherzo I: Allegro
Scherzo II: Allegro vivace: scorrevole e bisbigliando
Lento – Adagio flessibile
Each of these movements is based on the same architectural outline, but expresses it with a different constructional technique. In addition, this same outline informs the construction of the symphony as a whole, and is also used as the basis of subdividing sections of each movement.[4]
The symphony begins with a movement approximating the traditional sonata-allegro form.[5] It begins in slow tempo in the tonality of D, quoting in the flutes a plainsong addressed to the Archangel Michael, "Sancte Michael Archangele, defende nos in praelio", and the movement becomes progressively faster until the opening material and tonality returns and "the music is blown right away, as if it were on scurrying air-currents".[2] The pitches of the chant are first "sieved" by to retain only the first occurrence of pitch classes. This results in a seven-note sequence, which is expanded to an eight-note set by the arbitrary addition of D. This set is then arranged in an 8 x 8 transposition square (where the row is transposed successively to begin on each of its eight pitches), and this square is manipulated according to the 64-element Magic Square of Mercury.[6] At the same time, durations are built according to Fibonacci numbers descending from 21 downwards, with each number representing a multiple of a breve unit.[7] Within this process of acceleration the pitch material converges onto a centre of F which, together with B and A-flat, forms an alternative tonal centre to the tonic D throughout the symphony.[8]
The second and third movements are a pair of scherzos. The composer likens the second movement to the visual experience of contemplating a Brunelleschi church nave from a fixed central point. In addition, there was a "physical inspiration", of nesting seabirds wheeling around a towering cliff face.[9]
The second of the pair of scherzos distorts the perspective of the first, as if the same nave were being seen from one side. In this movement, the composer consciously borrows a device from the "Burlesque" movement of Mahler'sNinth Symphony, "where the tumult stops and the composer lets in 'windows'", through which slow passages of the adagio finale are glimpsed.[9]
The form of the third movement affects the finale in three ways. First, the "windows" disrupt the musical continuity of the previous two movements, and thereby "reducing, but not totally avoiding, the likelihood of an archetypal formal design being used in the finale".[5] Second, the windows' tonality of C♯, the modal dominants G♯ and F, and the diatonic dominant A (all established by the timpani), anticipate the finale. Thirdly, the windows sections, characterised by texture rather than by motif, recur twice in the finale.[10][11]
The finale then returns to the material of the first movement, and develops it more amply.[9]
On the largest scale, the four movements of the symphony combine into a single, overarching "meta-sonata form".[12] All four movements, however, resist structural closure by denying the tonic's usual function of asserting its superiority at the end, and an important aspect of the formal unfolding of the entire work is the oscillation between sections having tonal focus on the one hand with others of a tonally ambiguous polyphony.[13]
Discography
Peter Maxwell Davies: Symphony No. 3. BBC Philharmonic, Dennis Simons (leader), Edward Downes (conductor). BBC Artium. LP recording. BBC REGL 560. CD recording. BBC CD 560 X. [London?]: BBC Enterprises, 1985
Maxwell Davies: Symphony No. 3. BBC Philharmonic, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (conductor). CD recording. Collins Classics 14162. St Mary Cray, Orpington, Kent: Lambourne Productions, 1994.
Davies, Peter Maxwell. 1985. "Programme Note by the Composer". Booklet to Peter Maxwell Davies: Symphony No. 3. BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Dennis Simons (leader), Edward Downes (conductor). BBC Artium. CD recording. BBC CD 560. [London?]: BBC Enterprises.
Davies, Peter Maxwell. 1994. Notes in the booklet to Maxwell Davies: Symphony No. 3, 2–3. BBC Philharmonic, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, cond. CD recording. Collins Classics 14162. St Mary Cray, Orpington, Kent: Lambourne Productions Limited.
Jones, Nicholas. 1998. " 'Preliminary Workings': the Precompositional Process in Maxwell Davies's Third Symphony", Tempo, no. 204:14–22.
Jones, Nicholas. 2000. "Peter Maxwell Davies's "Submerged Cathedral": Architectural Principles in the Third Symphony", Music & Letters 81, no. 3 (August): 402–432.
Jones, Nicholas. 2002. "Peter Maxwell Davies's Basic Unifying Hypothesis: Dominant Logic". The Musical Times 143, no. 1878 (Spring): 37–45.
Harvey, David. 1985. "Peter Maxwell Davies: Symphony no. 3, BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, c. Edward Downes. BBC Artium Digital REGL 560". Tempo, new series, no. 155 (December): 43–44.
McGregor, Richard. 2000. "Max the Symphonist". In Perspectives on Peter Maxwell Davies, edited by Richard McGregor, 115–137. Aldershot Hants., Burlington Vermont, Singapore, and Sydney: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN1-84014-298-7.
Morrison, Richard. 2 September 1985. "Promenade Concerts: BBCPO/Downes: Albert Hall/Radio 3". The Times, issue 62232: 7, col. C.
Owens, Peter. 1994. "Revelation and Fallacy: Observations on Compositional Technique in the Music of Peter Maxwell Davies". Music Analysis 13, nos. 2–3 (October): 161–202.
Károlyi, Ottó. 1994. Modern British Music: The Second British Musical Renaissance—From Elgar to P. Maxwell Davies. Rutherford, Madison, Teaneck: Farleigh Dickinson University Press; London and Toronto: Associated University Presses. ISBN0-8386-3532-6.
Whittall, Arnold. 1994a. "The Bottom Line. Arnold Whittall Goes in Search of the 'Great Mystery' of Maxwell Davies, Who Celebrates His 60th Birthday This Month". The Musical Times 135, no. 1819 (September): 544–550.
Whittall, Arnold. 1994b. "Comparatively Complex: Birtwistle, Maxwell Davies and Modernist Analysis". Music Analysis 13:139–159.
Wright, David. 1992. "Grace in Strength". The Musical Times 133, no. 1797 (November): 580–581.