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Benjamin Britten's Simple Symphony, Op. 4 Movement III "Sentimental Saraband" Andy Bast August 4, 2007 GMUS 611 Dr. Johnson Contextual Background At the age of 20. English composer Benjamin Britten was already an accomplished composer. He composed his Simple Symphony, Op. 4 between December 23, 1933 and February 10, 1934, soon after his graduation from the Royal College of Music. The published score contains this note from Britten: "The 'Simple Symphony' is entirely based on material from works which the composer wrote between the ages of nine and twelve. (The actual sources are given in the footnotes to each movement.) Although the development of these themes in many places is quite new, there are large stretches of the work which are taken bodily from the early pieces--save for the rescoring for strings."1 The third movement, the Sentimental Sarabande begins with material from his Suite no. 3 for Piano (1925), while the middle section is from a Waltz written by a nine-year-old Britten in 1923. So, the question is: What is sentimental about this “Sentimental Sarabande?" An obvious answer is simply that the materials for the work are culled from the composer's childhood and therefore sentimental. However a theoretical analysis of the themes and their treatment can reveal a deeper understanding. The third movement traces a narrative through and between its binary sections (figure 1), which develops a tender impression of sentimentalism. A listener can understand this emotional response to the music by examining in detail the contrasts Figure 1 A B [a][b]-[a][b] 1 Steinberg, Michael. Simple Symphony for String Orchestra, opus 4. Program notes from San Francisco Symphony (www.sfsymphony.org). between the two sub-sections ([a] and [b]) of the work and how their relationships develop through the first and second large sections (A and B). Britten seems to set up this relationship between each contrary section in order to give a special sense of emotional release to the second. The calm of the [b] sub-section (marked poco piu traquillo) is only effective because of the emotional weight of the [a] sub-section, which is rife with a sense of dark and passionate yearning. The many suspensions and releases, coloring of chords with sevenths and non-chord tones, almost constant pedal G tonic in the bass, chromatic harmonies that tonicise various other key areas and the progression of the Urlinie all contribute to a sense of yearning that characterizes the initial section of the work. The A Section (Appendix 1 is a score and tonal analysis that is helpful to reference) The melody’s opening phrase, marked Poco lento e pesante (a little slow and heavy), begins with a climb from the tonic G in the first violins to the third (Bb) which is held over the bar and then returns to the tonic via an emphasis of the dissonant second scale degree (A). This three note ascending and descending motive is the primary melodic material of the [a] and is a microcosmic statement of the sub-section as a whole, which is trying to move from scale degrees 3-1 (See figure 2). The 3-1 movement also underpins the entire section, which will be examined later. This motive gives the impression of seeking to reach a higher point, but failing (m.3) and then revving up and trying again (m. 5-9). The various harmonies over which these suspended half-notes are laid create different dissonances (either a true suspension or a dissonance on beat two). Figure 2 (violin 1, mm. 1-4) In mm. 2 and 4, the dissonance falls on beat two and the chord tone is suspended over the bar; however, in m. 10 (identical restatement of the initial melodic phrase) a minor v chord is hinted at, making the suspension a 6-5 over the bar line. These melodic dissonances leave the listener harmonically off balance and contribute to the overall effect of the section. The dissonant non-chord-tones are not only present in the melody, but also appear in harmony parts, usually coloring the harmony with unresolved sixths/sevenths, neighboring or passing tones (e.g. mm. 5-8). A basic Schenkerian reduction of the background/middleground (see appendix 2) of the [a] sub-section gives a helpful view of the progression of the Urlinie and Ursatz from scale degree 3 to 1 and i-v-i. Sustaining the tonic and scale degree 3 through twenty-six measures until a structural minor v7 chord with scale degree 2 adds to the tension-filled drama of the movement, finally resolving to the tonic fundamental. The interesting tonicization of Bb major (which one can essentially view as a nested i-v-i progression with Bb functioning in a dominant-like role -or- one as a quick key change and the ii˚7 chord functioning as the nested v) foreshadows the [b] section key area. This concept of tonicization and obscuring the key area returns throughout the [a] section as a means of varying the harmony and eventually becomes the means of transformation or development of the [b] phrase at the end of the piece. The [a] sub-section is significantly more harmonically complex than the [b] section. Already in the third measure, the g minor melody is accompanied the dissonant ii˚7 chord and gives an impression of dark emotional intensity. Harmonies move between a plethora of diatonic chords (i, ii˚, III, iv, V7, v, vi, vii˚, etc.) while the lower strings hammer out a pedal G tonic, calling to mind the incessant drive of minor tonic pedal tones of the first movement of Brahms Symphony no. 1 in C minor. In addition to these driving pedals, the two pieces also share the melodic suspended dissonances tied over the bar and triple meter. Whether or not Britten consciously made this connection, the effect of these similar minor tonic 'drum beats' evokes a fierce pathos--not at all what we anticipate from the title of the movement. This pedal stays constant (reinforcing the minor tonic) for the first fifteen measures until it gives way to a decisive minor iv chord. As soon as the harmony shifts, the spell of pedal G is broken, and we hear the relative major Bb tonicized. This tonicization is short-lived, however and the harmony quickly shifts back to and candences on g minor. Measure 33 begins the second statement of the [a] section, which is essentially the same as the first. However, an unexpected tonicization of VI (Eb) and iv (c) in mm. 4144 harmonize the second phrase of the melody. Each iteration of the initial melodic cell has been chromatically harmonized further away from the tonic and this statement (further emphasized by fortissimo crescendos to sforzandos) takes our ears beyond the standard expection/realization formula. The harmonic shift also opens the door for the extension of the phrase and the elaboration of the harmony, tonicizing the bVII and VI, that follow before cadencing on the g tonic. A lone D (5th of the tonic triad) played by the second violins acts as a life-line, connecting the [a] section to [b]. Through common-tone modulation the D becomes the third of the relative major Bb key area. Melodically, as before, tied half-notes over the bar permeate the music; however, these no longer seem yearning. The melodic and rhythmic pull from beat three to beat one, which dragged the melodic motion through the harmonies in [a], has dissipated. Emphasis is now on the downbeat in this calm passage rather than beat three. Pedal string bass pizzicatos on the fifth (F) reinforce this new rhythmic emphasis with entrances almost exclusively on beat one and give the first seven measures a gentle dominant quality. These pizzicato bass notes and the up-bowed first violin off beats surround the inner voices in a soothing Ländler. Nothing is unexpected or out of the ordinary. Throughout this section the only chords we hear are I, IV and V, most of which occur over the pedal F. Very few non-chord tones color the harmony and the music gently undulates between I and V chords in the now tonic Bb, perhaps recalling the calm rocking motion of Brahms’ Wiegenlied, a truly sentimental reference. Sentimental Sarabande A basic definition for "sentimentalism" is: that which is prompted by feelings of tenderness, sadness or nostalgia. Perhaps we are to imagine the angst of the [a] section giving way to a sentimental image of the familiar cradle song-like [b] section.2 Certainly 2 Britten's relationship with his mother and other important feminine figures in his life, coupled with his choice to set themes he composed as a young boy could be the subject of further research. Britten's relationship with his mother was complex. She both encouraged his music making and rigorously controlled his life. He composed the work immediately after his parents (influenced by RCM authorities) disallowed him to travel to Austria to meet Alban Berg, who they determined would not be a good role model for the twenty-year-old. The Simple Symphony is dedicated to another important figure in his child hood-his viola teacher Audrey Alston, from whom he began taking lessons at age 10. (Perhaps the yearning for an alternate mother-figure?) the tonic-dominant harmonic rocking and reliance on exclusively major triads creates a sense of tenderness when juxtaposed with the initial dissonant-laiden [a] sub-section. Again, if this music is not a specific reference to Brahms, it is certainly an example of much simpler texture, harmony, phrase structure, and melody reminiscent of the im volkston (in the style of the people) movement in poetry and music throughout the 19th century. This move from the intensely yearning to the familiar and folk-like thus yields an effect of sentimentality in the [b] section. The following CIN diagrams detail the concepts of how human emotional states can relate to the compositional techniques Britten uses in each sub-section. This approach is useful in clarifying how the music can "sound" passionate, yearning, content, and sentimental. (see figures 3a and 3b) The large B section The second major section of this movement is much shorter than the first but contains a brilliant combination of the themes of each subsection [a] and [b], which coalesce as a transition to the final [b] section. The first phrase of subsection [a] at m. 92 is basically the same as the first phrase of the piece. The second phrase at m. 108 is more direct; the texture is reduced to unison strings and marked ff with accents and sforzandos. Although the harmony tonicizes Bb, similar to the earlier parallel passage in the A section, the character of the music is a stark contrast (earlier marked p and decrescendoing to pp with fluid texture). Clearly something has evolved in the music of this B section. Figure 3a-subsection [a]3 Generic Space -aspects of states -elements in directed motion -teleology Human Space Music Space -emotional yearning or reaching for something -yearning is accompanied by increase of desire for something -yearning is accompanied by a state of discontent -minor melodic three-note motive rises and falls -dynamic increases mirror rise of musical line -dissonances of melody and harmony create musical tension -Urlinie's prolongation of 31 creates tension Blended Space -music is anthropomorphized expressing a tension-filled longing for something. This tension is characterized by discontent/dischord. 3 Conceptual Integration Networks were developed by rhetorician Mark Turner and linguist Gilles Fauconnier in order to formalize the relationships between mental spaces involved in a conceptual blend (the examination of the correlations of two concepts and the new mental space-blended space-that emerges from their relationship with each other). (Zbikowski, Lawrence. "Cross-Domain Mapping," in Conceptualizing Music: Cognitive Structure, Theory, and Analysis (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002) 77-78. Figure 3b-subsection [b] Generic Space -aspects of states -elements in directed motion -teleology Human Space -feeling of contentment -calmness can be brought about by a sense of familiarity -sentimental thoughts are accompanied by pleasant memories Music Space -Standard non-chromatic harmony stablizes tonality -diatonic melodies -soft dynamics -rhythmic stability Blended Space -music feels peaceful, contented, and familiar -music has characteristics of sentimentalitycalmness/soft dynamics, familiarity-stable harmony & rhythm The hint at Bb doesn't dissolve back to the tonic and then proceed to the second statement of the first phrase (over sixteen measures: mm. 17-32). Instead, what took sixteen measures earlier, now takes eight as a massive lower string D major scale (V) emphatically drives to the unison tonic first phrase at m. 116. Measures 116-122 mirror mm. 42-48 but instead of returning to the tonic, the phrase unexpectedly extends the V/V harmony giving way in m. 127 to a stunning transition formed from [b] melodic material harmonized with modulatory chords, eventually making their way to the Bb major key area in m. 136. The melody has evaporated leaving only ppp first inversion ascending chords. So, the materials that represent a child-like or sentimental state ([b]) are gone leaving merely the emotional impression of that state, the calm rising harmonies. The yearning for our own childhood is not really the yearning of the actual events of childhood (i.e. the themes) but really a yearning of for simpler playful feelings of childhood. Herein lies the depth of the sentimental nature of the piece. Following the chords of sentiment, which crescendo and climax on a forte vi chord, the music finally gives way to the [b] subsection themes and harmony, calmly bringing the movement to a close. Concluding Remarks Although seemingly a simple setting of themes Britten composed as a child, the Sentimental Sarabande is a complex musical expression of the idea of sentiment and how one yearns for the release of sentimental feelings of childhood or child-like memories. The music takes on various emotional characteristics, which work together as a new musical anthropomorphic entity to express the intense yearning of the first sub-section [a] giving way to the calm sentimentality of the second sub-section [b]. Without this contrast, each section on its own is less than the musical meaning gained from brilliantly pairing them. Britten succeeds even in this "Simple" symphony in layering and weaving multiple meaning into the fabric of the music. Appendix 2-Schenkerian Analysis of subsection [a] (mm. 1-31)