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King Christian II (Sibelius)

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King Christian II
Incidental music by Jean Sibelius
The composer in 1904, by Albert Edelfelt
CatalogueOp. 27
Composed1898 (1898)
Performed24 February 1898 (1898-02-24)
Scoringorchestra

King Christian II (Kuningas Kristian II), Op. 27, is incidental music by Jean Sibelius for the Scandinavian historical play of the same name, written by his friend Adolf Paul. The original play deals with the love of King Christian II, ruler of Denmark, Sweden and Norway, for a Dutch girl, Dyvecke, a commoner. Sibelius composed in 1898 seven movements. He conducted the first performance of the first four parts the Swedish Theatre in Helsinki on 24 February 1898. In the following summer, he composed three more movements, Nocturne, Serenade and Ballad. The Nocturne was an interlude between the first act and the second. The position of the serenade changed. The ballad is a dramatic piece about the 1520 bloodbath which the king ordered in Stockholm. This movement shows already traits of the later First Symphony.

Sibelius derived from the incidental music a suite of five movements.[1] A complete performance of the suite takes about 25 minutes. It was first performed in December 1898, conducted by Robert Kajanus. Sibelius wrote in a letter: “The music sounded excellent and the tempi seem to be right. I think this is the first time that I have managed to make something complete.”

Movements of the suite

The suite consists of five movements:

Movement Type Tempo Notes
1 Nocturne Molto moderato A love scene.
2 Elegy Andante sostenuto The original introduction to the incidental music. Scored only for strings.
3 Musette Allegretto Dyvecke's dance. Originally scored for clarinets and bassoons, but with strings added for the suite.
4 Serenade Moderato assai (Quasi menuetto) Taken from the prelude to the third act of the play (music for the court ball).
5 Ballade Allegro molto The tempestuous music reflects the anger of the King.

References

  1. ^ "Incidental music / King Christian II (incidental music and orchestral suite)". Jean Sibelius. Finnish Club of Helsinki. Retrieved 24 September 2014.