Composition By 1877, Johannes Brahms had completed his first two symphonies: The
First Symphony in C minor (Op. 68) was the product of a famously long gestation; its initial drafts dated to as early as 1862. The
D major Second Symphony followed barely 12 months after the First, and the next few years saw Brahms' creative peak, during which he created "a series of large-scale masterpieces with fluency and ease." Among these masterpieces were
Brahms’ Violin Concerto (1878/79) and
Second (B major) Piano Concerto (1881), the two symphonic overtures, two large collections of songs (lieder) and duets, several major piano pieces including the third and fourth sets of
Hungarian Dances (1879), and three important chamber works, including the ‘lyrical’ and highly popular
G major Violin Sonata (1879). By 1883, Brahms’ attention had returned to the symphony, and he spent the summer of that year at Wiesbaden composing a new F major symphony. In October, he played the first and last movements (on piano) for
Antonín Dvořák, who remarked to
Fritz Simrock: “I say without exaggerating that this work surpasses his first two symphonies; if not, perhaps, in grandeur and powerful conception—then certainly in—beauty.”
"Frei aber froh" The first movement begins with a statement (F-A-F) which is broadly assumed to represent Brahms' personal motto,
frei aber froh (free but happy). Brahms had first developed this motto many years earlier after befriending Hungarian violinist
Joseph Joachim, who himself had already adopted a personal motto F-A-E,
frei aber einsam (free but lonely). Given Brahms’ reticent nature, there is academic disagreement as to his intent in presenting this motto as a personal musical statement; Brahms himself said nothing on the subject. On the other hand, he often reminded friends that "I speak through my music."
Associations with the Schumanns and the Rhine The first movement's opening F-A-F motto is followed immediately by a
passionato theme; a descending sequence which bears a strong resemblance to a phrase from
Robert Schumann's
Third Symphony, the 'Rhenish'. Brahms' stay in Wiesbaden (on the Rhine) during the composition of his Third Symphony may also have brought back memories of his early days in Düsseldorf in the home of Robert and
Clara Schumann. It was there in 1853 where the young Brahms and Robert Schumann had experimented with 'musical cyphers' for Joachim's amusement. These associations have led some to refer to the passionato theme as the 'Rhine' theme, but the transition to the second subject includes a chord progression which includes an allusion to the 'Siren's Chorus' from
Richard Wagner's
Tannhäuser. Whether this reference was a tribute to his recently deceased rival is unknown, although Brahms' admiration of Wagner's music was no secret; he had even possessed the original
Tannhäuser manuscript for a time. == Instrumentation ==