Haydn Symphony No. 35 | Il Giardino Armonico | Giovanni Antonini

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Published 2021-05-11
Joseph Haydn (1732-1809): Symphony No. 35 in B Major, Hob. I:35 (1767/41)
Il Giardino Armonico | Giovanni Antonini, Conductor

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In the lead-up to the 300th anniversary of Joseph Haydn's birth in 2032, the Joseph Haydn Foundation in Basel is organising, producing and financing the performance and recording of all 107 of the composer's symphonies by Il Giardino Armonico and Basel Chamber Orchestra under the artistic direction of Giovanni Antonini, one of the most highly-respected specialists in baroque, early classical and classical music, with its project Haydn2032.

Tags: Joseph Haydn, Haydn2032, Symphony No. 35, Il Giardino Armonico, Giovanni Antonini

All Comments (21)
  • What I like most about this apart from the HD video and hifi sound is the attitude of the players. They really seem to love this music and enjoy playing it. I remember seeing Roy Goodman say how much he like early Haydn. One day it will sink in in that Haydn didn't just churn out masterpieces in his later years. He was doing it his whole musical life.
  • @Sshooter444
    The B-flat symphonies from this one until 1780 are magical. I hope the horns get an extra pint of beer after each performance!
  • @mereyeslacalle
    Fascinante !!! Todas las sinfonías de Haydn 2032 son una maravilla, un regalo y deleite para el espíritu. Mi compañía en largos viajes de trabajo y también en mis horas libres. Gracias por estas publicaciones a Giovanni Antonini / Il Giardino Armonico. Se les quiere y admira desde Chile . Saludos afectuosos !!!
  • Lovely Symphony and lovely musicians. Thanks once more for your great work on Haydn symphonies!
  • @johnjensen6246
    This conductor&orchestra really perform this work with..GUSTO!
  • Un grand merci pour vos posts des symphonies de Haydn, compositeur trop déconsidéré en raison des génies qui l'ont largement éclipsé (Mozart et Beethoven essentiellement). Haydn est un grand compositeur dont j'écoute les oeuvres avec respect et admiration.
  • @ivanrashid7429
    Considering that these are all live concertos, this series almost reaches perfection in terms of accuracy (including horns) and sonority. Perhaps the tempo is more traditional (sometimes a little too fast?) but this is only a detail: from now on, those who want to listen to Haydn's symphonies will have to start from Antonini and Il Giardino Armonico
  • @TheSammadan
    endless beauty , thank you papa Haydn and thanks for the great conductor
  • @keesvanes2311
    Screentime of conductor Antonini is limited to just a few quick medium shots - no egomaniacal closeups of the maestros facial expressions and grimaces. Bravo!
  • @alfberisso
    Thank you very much for posting this excellent and inspiring performance! Also, the sound quality is excellent! 👏👏👏
  • @claudio8313
    Una delle sinfonie che preferisco, in particolar modo il primo movimento. Ottimamente eseguita nei tempi ed interpretazione
  • A fantastic performance - technically and interpretively, and artistically and emotionally - of a very fine symphony that shows the composer in complete control of his musical language, rhetoric, and musical inspiration. One of my definitions of great music is that the composer should have something to say, and the ability - creative, artistic and technical - to say it through music; this is a great symphony. I have always rated this early ‘sturm und drang’ symphony very highly, and it is a particularly useful work to demonstrate that the features of that movement were not limited to the seven minor key symphonies composed between c.1765 and 1773.* 1. Allegro 3/4 Sturm und drang - after a rather galant, Vanhal-style soft opening - it contains bold unisons, jagged melodic shapes, agitated strings, and has a driven feel to it, even as here, with Antonini’s perfectly set tempo. The switches back and forth between major and minor - light and shade, or chiaroscuro - create a real tension within the movement, and the contrapuntal sections of the darker development are very powerful; the contrast between galant and counterpoint - the latter another sturm und drang feature in Haydn - is masterfully balanced the composer throughout. 2. Andante 2/4 Strings only - a masterclass in so many ways; there is tonal ambiguity, rather than nursery rhyme simplicity; the development of ideas is highly original and always fascinating. At risk of spoiling this movement for all English speaking listeners, once you have caught the ‘Adeste fideles’ (‘O come all ye faithful’) melody, in order to understand Haydn’s masterful toying with the idea - variation, development, compression, expansion - you will find that you can sing the following words to almost the entire movement which neatly illustrates this point: O come let us adore him’, ‘O come let us, O come let us’, ‘O come’. An unusual way to understand Haydn’s skill in the intensive development and manipulation of musical motifs. 3. Minuet 3/4 This movement is perfectly paced by Antonini to my ears; does anyone have an explanation for the bizarre perpetuam mobile trio? 4. Presto 2/4 Whilst arguably a transitional symphony, the finale, whilst lighter than the opening movement, is I think an early attempt to better balance the symphony as a whole, and to move away from the front-loading of the musical content and weight of most contemporary symphonies, towards a more balanced four movement experience. The finale - besides probably Haydn’s first use of a ‘beginning as ending’ trick (here, the three chords) - has unpredictable phrases and modulations, with some slightly irregular rhythms; there is some feel of sturm und drang intensity too - though less darkly then in the first movement - it is a very clever and satisfying end to the work as a whole. The context of the symphony is interesting to know: Prince Nicholas had been to Paris, and he took his architect, and Luigi Tomasini (lead violin) with him. He was certainly eying up Versailles, amongst other things, with a view to a building project of his own! The indefatigable HC Robbins Landon tells us that the Prince left Paris on 14 November 1767, so this symphony has often speculatively been associated with his return to Eszterhaza with its extant dated autograph manuscript of 1 December 1767 - hence the pairing with the ‘Farewell’ symphony on the cd. The idea of a ‘Welcome’ symphony has not been established as a fact, but HCRL does note that it could explain the overall more cheerful character of the work; he points out that it would not have been appropriate for Haydn to welcome back the Prince with something like Symphony 49 ‘La Passione’. A few final points, I do not have the cd yet, but felt that the oboes here were slightly distant; on one or two previous cd’s I have noticed this on the video, but not on the actual cd; does anyone else have a view on this? Bravi, bravissimi to the two horns - there are some challenging parts here, brilliantly done. The filming of these performances is superb, indeed far better than most orchestral concerts available on YouTube - it is clear that a great deal of care and trouble has been taken to get them right. Therefore, a special thank you to everyone involved in making these productions so good; we should not take it for granted, the quality is not an accident, and so we should acknowledge it here. * Symphonies 34, 39, 49, 26, 44, 45, 52.
  • @hyseo1121
    Very enjoyable! Haydn symphonies are always fresh and have high qualities.
  • @MrFiddler66
    (1 dicembre 1767) Anche nelle sinfonie "in maggiore" di questo periodo si affaccia un sentimento nuovo, misto di inquietudine e di rivolta che trasfigura il primo e l'ultimo tempo. Il contenuto dell'"allegro" haydniano, pur mantenendosi nei margini tradizionali della forza classica, passa dal divertimento al dramma e, spesso alla disperazione. LDC
  • This note is prompted by Elaine Blackhurst's helpful comment following my previous contribution to this discussion. As the dating of Haydn's works has come into increasingly precise focus, it has become clear that, during his decades at the Esterházy court, the writing of symphonies tended to be concentrated at times when Haydn wasn't writing operas and other large-scale vocal works. This point is exemplified by the fact that there are no symphonies dated securely to 1766 or most of 1767 (until late in the second of those years, with No. 35). These were the years of the short opera 'La Canterina' (1766), besides the large Mass and the Stabat Mater mentioned previously. The converse applies to the years from late 1770 until 1773 - between what may have been the première of the opera 'Le Pescatrici' (September 1770) and that of 'L'Infedeltà delusa' (July 1773). This three-year stretch is particularly rich in impressive symphonies (whether securely dated on the basis of extant autograph scores, or plausibly assigned to that time). Based on a combination of primary source data (extant autograph scores) and informed speculation, Sonja Gerlach posited that the symphonies Nos. 44, 43, and 52 (in that order) date from the later months of 1770 and the early months of 1771, followed by No. 42 (autograph score dated 1771), and the three dated symphonies from 1772 (Nos. 47, 45, and 46). [This is written from my recollection of Gerlach's 1996 article, cited previously, rather than from current perusal of this source, and may therefore be subject to verification by other readers.] These were the years when Haydn was also writing the Opus 17 (1771) and Opus 20 (1772) string quartets, of which dated autograph scores survive. Allowing for the differences in musical style and orchestral forces between the Symphony No. 35, from relatively early in Haydn's maturity, and No. 102, from the composer's late middle age (1794-5), my impression is that the development sections in the opening movements of these two B flat major works pursue an analogous process of intensification. In the first movement of No. 35, the tension, already high, is ratcheted up further at bar 88, with the onset of the "towering contrapuntal anger" noted by Landon. The famously combative development section in the first movement of No. 102 undergoes a similar trajectory - if on a more extended time-frame - with a shattering plunge into C minor, after a few bars of relative relaxation in C major (dominated by a flute solo), which themselves follow a "violent canon", in the words of Landon (in his 1955 book on the Haydn Symphonies).
  • I agree totally with a post below. To me Haydn's early and middle period works are endlessly fascinating. Here, he and his little band of brothers of (around 20) Esterhazy court musicians are like alchemists in a lab experimenting with new and powerful concoctions. Isolated from many outside influences (as Haydn said) a genuine originality based on immensely powerful development sections made up of of smaller building blocks...often nearly devoid of melodic content...laid the ground for larger structures such as the finale of Mozart's 41st or the opening movement of Beethoven's 5th symphony. In the 1760s and 1770s Haydn's bold adventures in sound embodied the future of instrumental music!
  • @andreamundt
    OMG yes yes yes yes yes !!! <3 thx pure joy