Symphony No. 7 (Villa-Lobos)

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EnglishOdyssey of the Peace
CatalogueW458
Composed1945 (1945): Rio de Janeiro
Published1978 (1978): Rio de Janeiro
Symphony No. 7
Odisséia da paz
by Heitor Villa-Lobos
Heitor Villa-Lobos
EnglishOdyssey of the Peace
CatalogueW458
Composed1945 (1945): Rio de Janeiro
Published1978 (1978): Rio de Janeiro
PublisherRicordi / Belwin Mills[citation needed]
RecordedJanuary 1954 (1954-01)
Duration30 min
MovementsFour
Premiere
Date27 March 1949
LocationLondon
ConductorHeitor Villa-Lobos
PerformersLondon Symphony Orchestra

Symphony No. 7, Odisséia da paz (Odyssey of the Peace) is a composition by the Brazilian composer Heitor Villa-Lobos, written in 1945. A typical performance lasts about 30 minutes.

Villa-Lobos composed his Seventh Symphony in Rio de Janeiro in 1945 for a competition in Detroit. As required by the rules of the competition, it was submitted anonymously, using the pseudonym A. Caramurú. It was not awarded a prize in the competition. It was first performed in London on 27 March 1949 by the London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by the composer.[1]

The symphony, written shortly after the surrender of Germany on 7 May 1945, is subtitled "Odisséia da paz" (Odyssey of the Peace).[2] The second edition of the official Villa-Lobos catalogue, however, at one place gives "Odisséia de uma raça" (the title of an unrelated symphonic poem from 1953), together with a short programmatic description:[3]

A tidal wave splits up part of the Earth. Hills and mountains appeared, uncovering to human eyes a tortuous and irregular perspective, similar to the path of life across the centuries. As long as there are hills and mountains on earth, people will seek peace. The hills and mountains, firm and solid, planted on earth, defend mankind from whomever wishes, in vain, to destroy them and mimic them.

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