Amanda Holloway introduces Nielsen’s Symphony No. 2, ‘The Four Temperaments’ – a work famously inspired by a picture in a pub – and names its best recordings

By Amanda Holloway

2023-07-26 11:43:33


How fitting that the sociable composer Carl Nielsen should find inspiration for his Second Symphony in a country pub while having a beer with his wife and friends.

What inspired Nielsen to compose his second symphony?

There he spotted a naive, brightly coloured painting depicting the Four Temperaments – characters based on the medieval theory of humours that regulate the human body.

Nielsen laughed out loud at the comic, exaggerated figures representing the Choleric, the Phlegmatic, the Melancholic and the Sanguine man, yet couldn’t get them out of his mind. ‘These simple paintings contained a core of goodness and – even – a musical possibility into the bargain,’ he recalled some 30 years later.

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The Four Temperaments as depicted by Johann Kaspar Lavater © Getty Images

Nielsen had always been fascinated by psychology, and his letters contain perceptive portraits of musicians he encountered. In the Second Symphony he aimed to translate human complexity into music, perhaps recognising the contradictions evident in his own volatile character.

A sequence of photographs from 1887 (in the Royal Library Copenhagen) show Nielsen fooling around for the camera: his pleasant features, tufty blond hair and large blue eyes suggest an easy-going and playful young man. In fact, his life and relationships were often fraught with difficulty and he suffered from periods of depression.

When did Nielsen compose his second symphony?

Nielsen wrote his Second Symphony in 1901, while employed as a second violinist in the Chapel Royal Orchestra (later the Royal Danish Orchestra).

In November 1902, he conducted the premiere of his first opera at the Royal Theatre and three days later conducted the first performance of his Second Symphony for the Danish Concert Association. It was well received by the audience, but the reviews were mixed.

Danish composer and critic Leopold Rosenfeld called it ‘a suite of moods for orchestra’ rather than a symphony. ‘What is especially captivating about these musical illustrations is the composer’s ability to mix colours, which neglects no opportunity to exercise the listening ear. Sometimes, though, the colours are very brutal and in their crudeness easily cross the aesthetic line.’

Later audiences would be enchanted by the ideas that mark Nielsen out as an original, experimental and bold composer. Those qualities were already evident in his First Symphony of 1892, his unorthodox juggling of keys anchored by an instinctive feeling for counterpoint and melody.

He developed these more successfully in the Second Symphony, which though it may not rival the Third Symphony (‘Espansiva’) in popularity, nevertheless has many of the same ingredients. Nielsen knows how to lift the heart with those joyful high woodwind passages, while his earthy bassoon and trombone lines add colour and depth to his canvas. He has a gift for depicting life in all its mess and beauty, and nowhere more so than in ‘The Four Temperaments’.

A guide to the music of Nielsen’s Symphony No. 2, ‘The Four Temperaments’