Symphonia: Adagio tenebroso
(1994)3(II, III=picc).2.corA.2(II=Ebcl).bcl.2.dbn-4.3.3.1-timp.perc(4):BD/
4bongo dr/glsp/4tpl.bl/cowbells/vib/2susp.cym/2tom-t/2wdbl/SD/xyl/
tam-t/marimba/wood drum/2metal block-pft-strings
Abbreviations (PDF)
Boosey & Hawkes (Hendon Music)
As I though about this score, I remembered the poem of the Jacobean poet, Richard Crashaw, Bulla (Bubble) in which a floating bubble is personified and thinks about earthly things, especially in this passage:
Sum caecae speculum Deae.
Sum fortunae ego tessera;
Quam dat militibus suis;
Sum fortunae ego symbolum,
Cum mortalibus Ebriis
Obsignatque tabellulas.
I am the glass of the blind goddess;
I am the die of fortune which she gives her soldiers;
I am the creed of fortune by which she confirms the tenuous faith of drunken
mortals and seals their documents.
Adagio Tenebroso was commissioned by the British Broadcasting Company to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Promenade Concerts. It is dedicated to the Proms and to Amira and Alexander Goehr.
It was composed during my 85th year mostly at Southbury, Connecticut.
-Elliott Carter, 1994
Reproduction Rights:
This programme note can be reproduced free of charge in concert programmes with a credit to the composer
Adagio tenebroso is the first movement of the orchestral triptych Symphonia: sum fluxae pretium spei. A symphony beyond symphonies, this was an astoundingly and hearteningly massive achievement for a composer in his mid-eighties. The invention is consistently alert, the execution masterful and the development typically nimble. Thinking of a Latin poem by the seventeenth-century English poet Richard Crashaw, Carter adopts the viewpoint of a bubble floating above human affairs, observing, in the three movements, the games people play, the tragedies they endure, and the life that goes on fizzing through them. These movements may be performed separately and were separately commissioned, Partita by the Chicago Symphony, Adagio tenebroso by the BBC and Allegro scorrevole by the Cleveland Orchestra.
- Programme note by Paul Griffiths
Reproduction Rights:
This programme note can be reproduced free of charge in concert programmes with a credit to the author.
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Oliver Knussen
Deutsche Grammophon 4791520