In Tchaikovsky's symphonic output, his Symphony No. 4 was a pivotal
work. It announced the composer as a major symphonist of his time,
overshadowing his previous, less-than-distinguished efforts in this
form, and opened the way to his last, major, works: the haunting Fifth
Symphony and the biographical Sixth, the profound Pathétique.
Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony -- written in 1877 at the age of
thirty-seven -- offers itself as an intensely personal statement.
Dramatically shaped and brilliantly orchestrated, it captures a
theatrical quality and orchestral color that shaped the composer's
symphonic fantasy Francesca da Rimini, written just a year earlier. The
Fourth opens unequivocally with the thrust of a brass fanfare -- the
fate motive that is to reappear in the last movement -- then flows with
the effortless quality that characterizes Tchaikovsky's great,
generously melodious ballet scores. The second movement lingers over one
of the composer's most poignant melodies, and the third -- the Scherzo
-- offers a delightful fantasy from this master orchestrator: the
charming Pizzicato ostinato, a unique moment in the entire orchestral
literature.
The symphony is reproduced here from the authoritative Breitkopf &
Härtel edition, with bar-numbered movements and ample margins at the
bottom of each score page for notes and analysis. Ideal for study in the
classroom, at home, or in the concert hall, this affordable, high
quality, conveniently sized volume will be the edition of choice for
music students and music lovers alike