Symphony No. 39 (Haydn)


Symphony No. 39 is a symphony in G minor by Franz Joseph Haydn in 1765, at the age of 33 under the beneficence of Prince Nikolaus Esterházy. It is the earliest of Haydn's minor key symphonies associated with his Sturm und Drang period works. The work was influential and inspired later G minor symphonies by Johann Christian Bach and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

Movements

It is written for an orchestra consisting of two oboes, four horns, and strings. There are four movements:
  1. Allegro assai,
  2. Andante, in E major
  3. Menuet & Trio,
  4. Finale: Allegro di molto,
The opening movement features a nervously exciting main theme interrupted by frequent pauses. Felix Diergarten has specifically analysed the pauses in the first movement in the symphony, with respect to symphonic form of the time. Both the first and second theme groups begin with the same two bars of melodic material.
In contrast to the Sturm und Drang of the opening movement, A. P. Brown describes the Andante as "one of Haydn's most galant slow movements, with its small meter signature, sixteenth tripets, slides, weak resolutions, echoes, and generally thin texture".
The minor mode returns for the Menuet which is contrasted by a bright major-mode Trio which features high notes for the first horn.
The frenetic Sturm und Drang finale brings the symphony to an energetic conclusion.