A typical performance usually lasts around 30–40 minutes. The work is in four movements:
I. Allegro con brio The first movement opens with the four-note
motif discussed above, one of the most famous motifs in Western music. The movement continues in
sonata form, the standard form for first movements that Beethoven inherited from his
Classical predecessors
Haydn and
Mozart. There is an exposition, which establishes a secondary key of E flat major and is repeated; a
development section that recuts and redeploys the musical material in various ways; a recapitulation, which repeats the themes of the exposition largely in the home key of C; and a massive
coda. The particular variety of sonata form Beethoven uses was earlier a favorite of Haydn: most of the themes are developed from one single motif, i.e. the four-note passage heard at the opening. The movement is terse and is indeed the shortest of all of Beethoven's symphonic first movements. Different listeners will hear the affect of the movement differently, but a common perception is that it is intense, stormy and impassioned; one commentator suggests "The first movement erupts from the orchestra with alarming ferocity." The recapitulation section involves one startling interruption: all but the first oboe player fall silent as the latter plays plays a brief and mournful recitative, marked
adagio. The music then resumes at tempo with renewed intensity. Conductors differ in how they direct the four opening bars. Many observe the composer's tempo mark, starting the movement at
allegro con brio with two fermatas. Others seek to add weight by playing the motif in a slower and more stately tempo; still others add on to this approach a
molto ritardando; i.e. slowing down.
II. Andante con moto The second movement, in A major, the
subdominant key of C minor's relative key (
E major), is a lyrical work in
double variation form, which means that two themes are presented and varied in alternation. The first theme, with which the movement opens, is given below. At its first appearance, it is given by violas and cellos, with accompaniment by the double basses. \relative c{ \clef bass \key as \major \time 3/8 \tempo "Andante con moto" 8=92 \partial 8 es16.(\p as32) | c8_. 16.( bes32 as16. c32) | f,8~ 16.( a32 bes16. c32) des16.( c32 bes16. des32 g,16. bes32) e,16.( g32) c8~ 16.( bes32) a16.( f32) bes8.( des16) g,16.( es32) as8 16.( c32) es4.\f c8\p} And the second theme is: Following the variations there is a long coda.
III. Scherzo: Allegro The third movement is in
ternary form, consisting of a
scherzo and trio. Beethoven started using a scherzo as a third movement in his
Second Symphony (breaking with the tradition of using a minuet as a third movement). He retained the practice in all his later symphonies, with the exception of
No. 8. The movement returns to the opening key of C minor and begins with the following theme, played by the cellos and double basses: :\relative c{ \clef bass \key c \minor \time 3/4 \tempo "Allegro" \partial 4 g(\pp | c ees g | c2 ees4 | d2 fis,4) | g2.~ | g2.} The opening theme is answered by a contrasting theme played by the
winds, and this sequence is repeated. Then the horns loudly announce the main theme of the movement, and the music proceeds from there. The trio section is in C major and is written in a contrapuntal texture, opening with a solo passage for the cellos and basses. When the scherzo returns for the final time, it is performed by the strings
pizzicato and very quietly. "The scherzo offers contrasts that are somewhat similar to those of the slow movement [
Andante con moto] in that they derive from extreme difference in character between scherzo and trio ... The Scherzo then contrasts this figure with the famous 'motto' (3 + 1) from the first movement, which gradually takes command of the whole movement." The third movement does not end with a pause, but rather with a transition passage to the final movement. This transition begins
pianissimo with a long sequence of repeated timpani notes, then shift to a tremendous crescendo, and the finale is played
attacca.
IV. Allegro The triumphant and exhilarating finale begins with the following theme: The sound becomes suddenly much louder: the first three movements were composed for a Classical orchestra, with the parts identical to those needed to perform (e.g.)
Mozart's
Jupiter Symphony, but at the outset of the finale five players join in who have hitherto been silent: three trombones, contrabassoon, and piccolo. The music is in the symphony's home key of C, but now in the major mode.
Lewis Lockwood suggested that shifting to major mode for the final movement is unusual for Beethoven, and Beethoven himself continued the practice in his
Ninth Symphony and
last piano sonata. The Fifth Symphony finale is written in an unusual variant of sonata form: at the end of the development section, the music halts on a
dominant cadence, played fortissimo, and the music continues after a pause with a quiet reprise of the "horn theme" of the scherzo movement. The recapitulation is then introduced by a crescendo coming out of the last bars of the interpolated scherzo section, just as the same music was introduced at the opening of the movement. The interruption of the finale with material from the third "dance" movement was pioneered by
Haydn, who had done the same in his
Symphony No. 46 in B, from 1772. It is unknown whether Beethoven was familiar with this work or not. The Fifth Symphony finale includes a very long coda, in which the main themes of the movement are played in temporally compressed form. Towards the end the tempo is increased to
presto. The symphony ends with 29 bars of C major chords, played fortissimo. In
The Classical Style,
Charles Rosen suggests that this ending reflects Beethoven's sense of proportion: the "unbelievably long" pure C major cadence is needed "to ground the extreme tension of [this] immense work." == Influences ==