Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- References to Tippett's scores and essays
- 1 ‘Only half rebelling’: tonal strategies, folksong and ‘Englishness’ in Tippett's Concerto for Double String Orchestra
- 2 From pastiche to free composition: R. O. Morris, Tippett, and the development of pitch resources in the Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli
- 3 ‘Is there a choice at all?’ King Priam and motives for analysis
- 4 Tippett's Second Symphony, Stravinsky and the language of neoclassicism: towards a critical framework
- 5 Tippett, sequence and metaphor
- 6 Tonal elements and their significance in Tippett's Sonata No. 3 for Piano
- 7 ‘Significant gestures to the past’: formal processes and visionary moments in Tippett's Triple Concerto
- 8 Tippett's King Priam and ‘the tragic vision’
- 9 Tippett at the millennium: a personal memoir
- 10 Decline or renewal in late Tippett? The Fifth String Quartet in perspective
- Appendix: glossary of terms used in pitch-class set theory
- Index
4 - Tippett's Second Symphony, Stravinsky and the language of neoclassicism: towards a critical framework
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- References to Tippett's scores and essays
- 1 ‘Only half rebelling’: tonal strategies, folksong and ‘Englishness’ in Tippett's Concerto for Double String Orchestra
- 2 From pastiche to free composition: R. O. Morris, Tippett, and the development of pitch resources in the Fantasia Concertante on a Theme of Corelli
- 3 ‘Is there a choice at all?’ King Priam and motives for analysis
- 4 Tippett's Second Symphony, Stravinsky and the language of neoclassicism: towards a critical framework
- 5 Tippett, sequence and metaphor
- 6 Tonal elements and their significance in Tippett's Sonata No. 3 for Piano
- 7 ‘Significant gestures to the past’: formal processes and visionary moments in Tippett's Triple Concerto
- 8 Tippett's King Priam and ‘the tragic vision’
- 9 Tippett at the millennium: a personal memoir
- 10 Decline or renewal in late Tippett? The Fifth String Quartet in perspective
- Appendix: glossary of terms used in pitch-class set theory
- Index
Summary
Tippett's Second Symphony occupies a unique, significant, yet also somewhat problematical position within the composer's stylistic development. The symphony (1956–7) is often referred to as ‘transitional’, as leading from the tonal focus and lyricism of The Midsummer Marriage (1946–52) to the new structural and stylistic direction of King Priam (1958–61). According to Ian Kemp, ‘between The Midsummer Marriage and Symphony No. 2 Tippett's style changed, but not so rapidly as to conceal the evidence of organic development. Between the Symphony and King Priam however a change occurred of such rapidity that to many commentators of the time it seemed to lack necessity.’ What renders this transitional position more problematical is the individual identity and integrity of the work. The particular realisation of the Beethovenian symphonic model (Tippett's ‘historical archetype’) and the obvious sense of harmonic polarity at several structurally significant points create a soundworld which is both highly specific and unique.
What further problematises the situation of the work is its striking reference to an apparent Stravinskian neoclassical praxis, a factor which is highlighted, together with the Symphony's transitional position, by Tippett himself: ‘by the time I returned to the problem of orchestral music with my Symphony No. 2 … I had completed a long opera, The Midsummer Marriage. Although I found the symphonic problems as intractable as ever, the work became a sort of turning-point.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Tippett Studies , pp. 78 - 94Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999