Symphony No. 1 (Svendsen)

Symphony No. 1
by Johan Svendsen
The composer (c. 1870)
KeyD major
CatalogueJSV 38[1]
Opus4
Composed1865 (1865)–1867
PublisherFritzsch (1868)
Duration35 mins.
Movements4
Premiere
Date12 October 1867 (1867-10-12)
LocationKristiania, Norway
ConductorJohan Svendsen

The Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 4 (JSV 38),[1] is a four-movement orchestral work written from 1866 to 1867 by the Norwegian composer Johan Svendsen while he was a music student at the Leipzig Conservatory.[2] The first movement premiered in Leipzig on 9 May 1866 at the Altes Gewandhaus, with Svendsen conducting; a year later in the same location, he conducted Movements II–IV for the first time.[3] These earlier partial performances notwithstanding, the symphony—in its entirety—received its premiere in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway, on 12 October 1967, again under the composer's baton.[3]

The First Symphony was an instant success that placed Svendsen at the forefront of Norwegian art music and squarely within the European symphonic tradition.[4] The composer's friend and countryman, Edvard Grieg, was so moved by the symphony that he withdrew his own work in the genre, the Symphony in C minor (EG 119; 1864); Grieg, in a review, praised "the perfect balance between ideas and technique", and called the orchestration among "the best in existence" ... "God alone knows where Svendsen got it all from".[4]

In 1874, Svendsen completed his next (and final) work in the genre: the Symphony No. 2 in B-flat major, Op. 15.

Structure

The Symphony No. 1 is in four movements:[5]

  1. Molto allegro
  2. Andante
  3. Allegretto scherzando
  4. Finale. Maestoso – Allegro assai con fuoco

Instrumentation

The First Symphony is scored for the following instruments, organized by family (woodwinds, brass, percussion, and strings):[5]

Discography

The sortable table below lists commercially available recordings of Svendsen's First Symphony:

No. Conductor Orchestra Rec.[a] Time Recording venue Label Ref.
1 Odd Grüner-Hegge Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra (1) c. 1961 ? ? Philips
2 Miltiades Caridis Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra (2) c. 1974 33:26 ? Norsk Kulturråds Klassikerserie
3 Neeme Järvi (1) Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra 1986 34:48 Gothenburg Concert Hall BIS
4 Mariss Jansons Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra (3) 1987 34:55 Oslo Concert Hall EMI Classics
5 Ari Rasilainen Norwegian Radio Orchestra 1996 36:42 NRK Broadcasting Hall, Oslo Finlandia
6 Terje Mikkelsen Latvian National Symphony Orchestra 1997 35:33 Rīgas Reformātu baznīca cpo
7 Bjarte Engeset Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra 1997 36:02 Wessex Hall, Poole Arts Centre Naxos
8 Thomas Dausgaard Danish National Radio Symphony Orchestra 2000 35:26 Danish Radio Concert Hall, Copenhagen Chandos
9 Neeme Järvi (2) Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra 2012 33:28 Grieg Hall Chandos

Notes, references, and sources

Notes
References
Sources
  • Engeset, Bjarte (2022). "Svendsen: Johan: Symphony No. 1 in D major, Op. 4". musikkarven.no. Norsk Musikkarv. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
  • Christophersen, Morten (2013). Johan Svendsen: Orchestral Works, Vol. 2 (CD booklet). Neeme Järvi & Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra. Chandos. CHAN 10711.
  • Haglund, Rolf (1986). John Svendsen: The Two Symphonies / Two Swedish Folk Tunes for Strings (CD booklet). Neeme Järvi & Gothenburg Symphony Orchestra. BIS. CD–347.
  • "John Svendsen: Sinfonie (D dur) für Orchester, Op. 4" [John Svendsen: Symphony (D major) for Orchestra, Op. 4]. imslp.org. E.W. Fritzsch. 1868. Retrieved 23 October 2025.