Symphony No. 4, Op. 29, symphony for orchestra by Danish composer Carl Nielsen in which he set out to capture in music the idea of an “inextinguishable” life force that runs through all creation. The work premiered on February 1, 1916.
In a letter to a friend, Nielsen stated that in this symphony he intended
to represent all that we feel and think about life, in the most fundamental sense of the word.…Everything may be included in this concept.
Nielsen’s symphony is structured in four interconnected movements, with but the briefest of pauses between them. The first movement opens with bold brass and percussion dominant, its stirring theme increasing in intensity. This dramatic opening is soon contrasted with a more gently playful theme for woodwinds and low strings in the second movement. In the third movement, stern and solemn moods dominate, though the fourth movement allows a sense of optimism to return. Nielsen’s symphony ranges through a variety of moods, sometimes grim but in the end offering reason for hope. Nielsen seems to embody his image of the inextinguishable forces of life in two characters, the determined and the lyrical, though it is the determined that holds sway.