Hide player

Hyperion Records

Symphony No 43 in E flat major 'Mercury'
composer
Recordings
Cover of 'Haydn: Symphonies Nos 42-44' (CDH55117)
Details
Movement 1: Allegro
Track 5 on CDH55117 [6'49] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Movement 2: Adagio
Track 6 on CDH55117 [9'33] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Movement 3: Menuetto
Track 7 on CDH55117 [3'46] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Movement 4: Finale: Allegro
Track 8 on CDH55117 [5'51] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Symphony No 43 in E flat major 'Mercury'
EnglishFrançaisDeutsch
The source of the ‘Mercury’ nickname of Symphony No 43 (1772) remains unknown. It could refer to its use as incidental music from some play or other given at Eszterháza, or it may not have appeared until the nineteenth century. It would certainly be wrong to impose any programmatic elements on to the abstract musical drama and search for a portrait of the gods’ winged messenger.

The symphony is marked by a unifying figure that links together the musical material of the various movements in much the same way that Beethoven was to do with the ‘fate’ motif in his Fifth Symphony. The idea here also has a three-note ‘knocking’ rhythm, first heard in the Allegro’s opening theme, then in the repeated quavers of the Adagio’s main idea, and finally in the reiterated figure of the Minuet. Only the finale avoids its use, being dominated instead by its strangely uncertain opening theme and vigorous, rushing quavers.

from notes by Matthew Rye © 1992

Track-specific metadata
Click track numbers opposite to select

Show: MP3 FLAC ALAC
   English   Français   Deutsch
over £20 for 10% discount on whole order
over £40 for 15% discount on whole order
over £59 for 25% discount on whole order
over £200 for 35% discount on whole order
(P&P free on almost all orders.)
Your basket:
There are no items in your basket.
Use the Buy buttons across the site.

The following discounts will be applied for CD purchases:
ms'); ' %>