The Fourth Symphony of the German composer Karl Amadeus Hartmann is a work for string orchestra. It was completed in 1946-7.
It was derived in part from an earlier Concerto for strings and soprano written in 1938. Hartmann revised the work to include a new purely instrumental third and closing movement, marked Adagio appassionato. The second movement, Adagio di molto, risoluto, contains several references to Hartmann's own First String Quartet of 1933.[1] A typical performance lasts around 33 minutes.
The work was premiered in this form by the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra under Hans Rosbaud[2] in Munich on 2 April 1948, chronologically before the premiere of his Third Symphony.[3]
References
edit- ^ Jaschinski, A. (1999) Hartmann: Symphonies 1-8, liner notes to EMI 5 56911 2
- ^ "4. Symphonie". schott-music.com.
- ^ Rickards, Guy (1995). Hindemith, Hartmann and Henze. Phaidon. ISBN 9780714831749.