The suite is in five movements, each bearing a
programmatic title in French: • "Renouveau champêtre" (Renewal [i.e., Spring] in the Country) • "Gamins en plein air" (Children Outdoors) • "La vieille maison de l’enfance, au soleil couchant; Pâtre; Oiseaux migrateurs et corbeaux; Cloches vespérales" (The Old Childhood Home at Sunset; Shepherd; Migratory Birds and Crows; Vesper Bells) • "Rivière sous la lune" (River beneath the Moon) • "Danses rustiques" (Rustic Dances) The work follows a programme presenting a day-night-day sequence, as Enescu had done nearly forty years earlier in his Op. 1,
Poème roumain, and would do again two years later in the suite ''
Impressions d'enfance'' for violin and piano, Op. 28. Nevertheless, Enescu transforms his descriptive writing into the realm of
absolute music in one of his most sophisticated orchestral compositions . Programme music, however, is rare in Enescu's output. Apart from the two works just mentioned, he touched on it in some of the
Pièces impromptues for piano (1913–16), and programmatic elements remain concealed in the
Third Symphony and the tone poem
Vox maris. There is considerable disagreement about the forms of some of the movements, as well as the larger question of whether Enescu employs
cyclic procedures in this work. ==References==