Symphony in E-flat (A. Reicha)
composed in Bonn, c. 1790–91
Instrumentation: flute, two oboes, two bassoons, two trumpets, two horns, timpani, and strings
Of the four symphonies Reicha wrote in Bonn, the Symphony in E-Flat Major is in many respects the most forward-looking. As with the rest of his Bonn orchestral music, he works on a broad canvas, fashioning a work that in its entirety lasts over half an hour. It is possible that his overall design, including the choice of C minor for the third movement, was influenced by his uncle Josef’s symphony in the same key. The second movement begins as a true funeral march in the most extravagant contemporary French style whose second half, quite unconventionally, departs into a very different character. The fiery third movement is a “Menuetto” in name only: its rapid tempo and minor-key fury show all the hallmarks of the Beethovenian scherzo, here made all the more interesting for being contemporaneous with Beethoven’s own first essays in the style.
Sources
- Mentioned in Reicha's letter to Artaria from October 1797.
- Autograph Score, Bibliothèque nationale de France (F-Pn), MS-9153
Overview
I. Allegro
- E-flat major
- 400 measures
II. Largo
- G minor – E-flat major
- 55 measures
III. Menuetto molto vivace – Trio
- C minor – E-flat major
- 86 measures
IV. Finale. Allegro molto vivace
- E-flat major
- 510 measures