Michael Haydn's Symphony No. 32 in D major, Perger 23, Sherman 32, MH 420, was written in Salzburg in 1786.
Scored for flute, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani and strings. It is Haydn's only symphony in two movements; this it has in common with Carl Nielsen's Symphony No. 5 but not much else (Delarte, 2006).
The first movement, in 3
8, begins softly with a somewhat dancelike
theme.
At
measure 20, a new theme is introduced
forte with a more pronounced dance character. After the establishment of
A major, the second subject group begins at measure 41:
leading to a much more lyrical theme at measure 55. After a typical
unison
scale run, the
exposition concludes with A major firmly established as the
tonic. The
development is concerned almost exclusively with Example 2. A general pause precedes the
recapitulation, which besides reorienting the second subject group to
D major, also mixes the subjects of the groups together, with special emphasis on Example 2. Haydn indicated the development, recapitulation and
coda are to be repeated as a unit, but that repeat is normally ignored in modern performance.
For the slow movement, the second oboist switches to flute.
The concluding Rondo's principal theme
is
triadic to an extent not encountered in the previous movement, while the contrasting themes tend to be stepwise.
On the CPO label, this symphony is available on a CD that also includes Symphonies Nos. 21, 30 and 31; Johannes Goritzki conducting the Deutsche Kammerakademie Neuss. The exposition repeat in the first movement is obeyed, the repeat of the development and recapitulation is ignored.
Michael Haydn's Symphony No. 32 in D major, Perger 23, Sherman 32, MH 420, was written in Salzburg in 1786.
Scored for flute, 2 oboes, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani and strings. It is Haydn's only symphony in two movements; this it has in common with Carl Nielsen's Symphony No. 5 but not much else (Delarte, 2006).
The first movement, in 3
8, begins softly with a somewhat dancelike
theme.
At
measure 20, a new theme is introduced
forte with a more pronounced dance character. After the establishment of
A major, the second subject group begins at measure 41:
leading to a much more lyrical theme at measure 55. After a typical
unison
scale run, the
exposition concludes with A major firmly established as the
tonic. The
development is concerned almost exclusively with Example 2. A general pause precedes the
recapitulation, which besides reorienting the second subject group to
D major, also mixes the subjects of the groups together, with special emphasis on Example 2. Haydn indicated the development, recapitulation and
coda are to be repeated as a unit, but that repeat is normally ignored in modern performance.
For the slow movement, the second oboist switches to flute.
The concluding Rondo's principal theme
is
triadic to an extent not encountered in the previous movement, while the contrasting themes tend to be stepwise.
On the CPO label, this symphony is available on a CD that also includes Symphonies Nos. 21, 30 and 31; Johannes Goritzki conducting the Deutsche Kammerakademie Neuss. The exposition repeat in the first movement is obeyed, the repeat of the development and recapitulation is ignored.