related works
Symphonie no. 2 : Prélude à la nouvelle journée, 1919-1920 / Matthijs Vermeulen
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Orchestra
Scoring:
4fl(pic) 2ob 2ob(eh) 5cl cl-b 3fg cfg 4h 2trp-p 4trp 3trb-t tb timp 4perc xyl 2hp str
L'Élue : Prelude pour orchestre / Bram Kortekaas
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Orchestra
Scoring:
picc 3fl(picc) fl-a 3ob 2eh 3cl 2cl-b 3fg 2cfg 8h 5tpt(tpt-b) 3trb 2tb 2timp 3perc str
Quasi in modo di valzer : orchestra, 1973 / Nico Schuyt
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Orchestra
Scoring:
3333 4331 timp 3perc cel hp str
Symphony nr. 2 ("Celebration") : for large wind band; opus 140 / Marc van Delft
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Orchestra
Scoring:
2pic 2fl fl-a 2ob eh 2fg cfg 7cl cl-b 2sax-a 2sax-t sax-bar 4hn 4trp 3trb 4tb 7perc vc cb
composition
Symphonie no. 4 : Les victoires, 1940-1941 / Matthijs Vermeulen
Other authors:
Vermeulen, Matthijs
(Composer)
Description:
Program note (English): [Première: September 30, 1949 - Rotterdam - Rotterdams Philharmonic Orchestra, Eduard Flipse, conducting] - From a restless bustling uproar of woodwinds and brass instruments, gradually developing around the fundamental tone c, and at its climax condense themselves in a system of laconic chords, three themes appear successively. Each of these themes forms a lyrical song which expresses different emotions. The first floats forward; the second increases in momentum; the third is pensive and melancholic. While these three emotions develop, the speed nor the drive diminishes. This is how the musical process begins, and one has an overview of the inner motivation. It is not immediately sustained. The idea returns in memory to the impulses from which it originated, to those of improvised tumult, to those spinning puffs of bellows, which are then renewed in the same strict rhythm. Here the voices circulate around a fundamental note g, but this time they are not entangled in a range
of stable chords, but demolish suddenly among the whirl.
Then the action resumes its course, to the beat of slow march, and with a new theme, which is accompanied by gently stirred melodies, the different degrees revealing a tender sentiment, which become more passionate and shimmering upon reaching completeness. We do not yet know where these intonations will take us. But as if a forgotten emotion secretly becomes conscious, in a deeper expression, rising from a concealed heart, almost imperceptibly changes from the quietly radiating gaiety of a sunlit parade to a funeral march. The melody indicating this inversion is a variation of the first of the three agitating themes, with which the musical process began. In its tragic emergence desire and determination are equally interpreted as grievance and bereavement. Each time after the melody appears, it is varied with trumpet calls, which create a more violent desire, multiplying and increasing continuously to its paroxysm.
A last thrust of hastening signals swell into a war song. The dead do not die entirely. They live on further through us, who wish the same, and for which they bring a sacrifice. The military song offered is alternatively turbulent and reflecting, strong and frail, resounding and ominous, nearby and remote, gentle wind and storm. At the background of the inciting theme, earlier articulations return in strength, which become a melody.
Everything we experienced resounds in an ecstatic tone. Even the long cantilena which was interpreted at the start of the musical process.
The entire horizon is filled with a serenity and broad sounds, floating beyond as a musing chorale of all woodwinds and brass instruments, against a wider and calmer plan, the hymns in the strings proclaim their hope and promise of good fortune.
Satisfaction is near but not yet attained [... ] an epilogue sets in with the same formula of robust, concise chords, which encounters the clamour in which the symphony started. A chorus of melodic jubilations, again sound from the fundamental tone c, and contradicting stanzas reword the unbeatable process, pass on a reply, a meaning and an end to the restless rumour from which the music originated. - MATTHIJS VERMEULEN