A Summer's Tale (Suk)
A Summer's Tale (Czech: Pohádka léta), Op. 29 is a tone poem for large orchestra by Josef Suk.[1][2]
The work was composed between 1907 and 1909.[3]
Structure and character[]
There are five movements:
- Voices of Life and Consolation
- Midday
- Blind Musicians
- In the Power of Phantoms
- Night.[2]
A performance typically takes one hour.[4]
Rob Cowan has described the work as Scriabinesque and found in it a foreshadowing of Shostakovich's orchestration.[5]
Performance and recording[]
The work received its premiere in 1909, and was initially coolly received – several critics charged it with being impressionistic.[6]
References[]
- ^ Andrew Clements (30 August 2012). "Suk: A Summer's Tale; Prague – review". The Guardian.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Don O'Connor. "Suk: A Summer's Tale". American Record Guide. 76 (1): 158.
- ^ Michael Kennedy; Joyce Kennedy (2013). The Oxford Dictionary of Music. Oxford University Press. p. 825. ISBN 978-0-19-957854-2.
- ^ Graham Rogers (2012). "Josef Suk Prague / A Summer's Tale (BBC Symphony Orchestra; conductor: Jiří Bělohlávek)" (Review).
- ^ Rob Cowan, SUK A Summer's Tale. Prague, Gramophone, retrieved 10 July 2015
- ^ Aleš Brezina; Eva Velická (2009). Aspects of music, arts and religion during the period of Czech Modernism. Peter Lang. p. 165. ISBN 978-3-03910-856-5.
Categories:
- Compositions by Josef Suk
- 1909 compositions
- Symphonic poems
- Classical composition stubs