The symphony is in three
movements, without breaks in between: A typical performance is expected to last only 15 minutes. This length is what gave rise to the name
Short Symphony.
I. Incisivo The first movement is in
sonata-allegro form, consisting of an
exposition where two
themes are first stated, a
development, a
recapitulation where the themes are restated, and a
coda. The movement's opening five-note
motive implies the
triads of both
D major and
D minor, creating the first of numerous
tonal ambiguities found throughout the work. Copland uses this motive to construct the movement's first theme in the tonal center of
G. : \relative c'' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"oboe" r r8 fis8-. d'8-. d,8-. f8-. c'8-. } This theme is repeated throughout the orchestra in the opening bars and is later heard in
augmentation with a
B-flat center, beginning with the flutes and
clarinets: : \relative c''' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #44 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"flute" \time 5/8 bes( bes' bes,8 \time 2/4 des4 aes'4~) \time 3/4 aes2.~ aes2 r4 } The second theme centered on
E is then stated by the
Heckelphone or
Bass Oboe, with
jazz-like
syncopated rhythms: : \relative c''' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #79 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"english horn" \time 5/8 r \bar "!" a8([ gis8 fis8] e8-.) r8 \bar "!" e4-- gis8-. e8-- r8 \bar "!" r8 r8 e8--~ e8[ fis8] \bar "!" e4-- gis8-. e8-. r8 \bar "!" e8-. r8 e8->[ \time 3/4 e8-. fis8-.] e8-.[ gis8-.] e4-- b'8-. e,4.--~ e8 r8 } The development section of the first movement is brief, consisting of only thirteen measures. It makes use of traditionally
fugal elements such as
stretto, which becomes a common device for the symphony's thematic development. This is followed by the return of the first and second themes, which now revolve around the tonal centers of B-flat and D, respectively. The movement concludes with a coda, where the entire orchestra restates the first theme centered on G. The movement's tonal centers are in
mediant and
submediant relationships. This characteristic can be traced back to the mediant relationships between keys in
Beethoven's works, whose use of such relationships
departed from other Classical period music. Passages in the movement also make frequent use of complex rhythms and
meter changes. The beginning of the recapitulation sees ten meter changes in fourteen measures, followed by an episode where as many as six meters are played simultaneously. A later passage has thirteen meter changes in a span of nineteen measures.
II. Espressivo The second movement is short—only 95 measures long—and is substantially slower in tempo than the previous movement. The musicologist
Howard Pollack describes the movement's structure to be in ABA
ternary form. However, according to the Copland scholar Quincy C. Hilliard, the structure of this movement differs from typical second movements as it resembles an ABBA "arch" design rather than the normal ABA form. This movement also contains some material from the first theme of the first movement, indicating the use of
cyclic form which becomes more prominent in the third movement. The A section is
dirge-like and begins with a descending
tetrachord theme with a B-flat center played by the
flute in G: : \relative c'' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 44 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #175 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"flute" \transposition g \numericTimeSignature \time 2/2 ees2( d2 \time 3/2 c2 bes1) } The theme is varied and then played in
counterpoint (e.g. in
stretto) by other instruments before the beginning of the B section at a slightly faster tempo. The B section is lighter and more dance-like, with an
F tonal center. Its theme is introduced by the flute in G and
imitated in a
canon-like form by the woodwinds. : \relative c''' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 2 = 58 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #208 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"flute" \transposition g \numericTimeSignature \time 2/2 c8.\(( d16-.) c8.( d16-.) c4 bes4~ bes4 c2 bes4~ bes4 c2. \time 5/4 bes2~ \bar "!" bes4\) r4 r4 } The A and B section themes are heard in counterpoint in a four measure transition followed by the return of the B section theme. The A section theme is then reused in a
stretto before the second movement is concluded and transitions into the third movement.
III. Preciso e ritmico Though the formal design of the third movement resembles the sonata-allegro form, it does not adhere strictly to it. For example,
Julia Smith's 1955 book on Copland states that the movement follows the cyclic principle. Such a form was devised by the composer
César Franck and reuses related thematic material from other movements for structural unity. The movement opens with a motive in the
bass clarinet with
pizzicato accompaniment, outlining the
D-flat major triad. The first theme with a D-flat tonal center is then introduced by a variety of instruments beginning with the flutes, while accompanied by a rhythmic
ostinato in the second violins. : \relative c'''' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #280 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"flute" \time 5/4 r r8 gis8-.( \bar "!" e,4-- cis2--)~ cis?8 r8 r4 \bar "!" } A syncopated motive follows, which matures into the second theme with an F tonal center in the violins: : \relative c' { \set Score.tempoHideNote = ##t \tempo 4 = 144 \set Score.currentBarNumber = #306 \bar "" \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"violin" \time 3/4 r8 f4-> f4->( f'8-.) f'4-> f4->( ees8-.) d8->~ d8 f4-> f4-> ees8-. \time 2/4 d4-> f4 \time 3/8 ees4->( d8-.) \time 2/4 c4-> aes4~ \time 3/4 aes?2.\laissezVibrer } Following a development section, a modified version of the first theme returns, with different melodic intervals but still centered around D-flat and accompanied by the ostinato. The syncopated second theme also returns, this time with an
A-flat tonal center. The coda begins with a return of the first movement's first theme, indicating the use of the cyclic principle. The symphony ends on an
open fifth, a chord which is repeated two more times in the 1955 revision of the score. The orchestration of the third movement makes more frequent use of the entire orchestra than that of the previous movements, using effects such as
muted trumpets,
col legno,
pizzicato, and
jeté. This movement also features many meter changes and syncopated rhythms. Pollack identifies "some assimilation of Mexican music" in the symphony's final movement. While composing the
Short Symphony, Copland himself told friends that "The Third movement ... begins to sound rather Mexican to me." The finale also quotes a
Werner R. Heymann song featured in
Erik Charell's German film operetta
Der Kongress tanzt (
The Congress Dances), which Copland had seen in a 1931 visit to
Berlin. == Style ==