List of symphonies in B minor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of symphonies in the key of B minor.

Composer Symphony
Anton Arensky  [ru] (1883)
Kurt Atterberg  [nl] (1909–1911)
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach Symphony for Strings "Hamburg" Wq. 182 no. 5/H.661 (after 1773)
Wilhelm Berger Symphony No. 2, Op. 80
Alexander Borodin Symphony No. 2 (1869 and 1877 revision)
Rutland Boughton Symphony No. 3 (1937)[1]
Fritz Brun Symphony No. 1 (1908)
Paul Büttner  [nl] (1918)
Alfredo Casella Symphony No. 1, Op. 5 (composed ca.1905–6, published 1906)
Edward Joseph Collins Symphony Nos habebit humus (1929)[2]
Cornelis Dopper Symphony No. 2 (1903)
Wilhelm Furtwängler Symphony No. 1 (1938–1941, premiere 18 January 2000)
Niels Gade  [nl] (1871)
Florian Leopold Gassmann Symphony (1769)[3]
Reinhold Glière Symphony No. 3, "Ilya Muromets", Op. 42 (1911)
Alexander Gretchaninov Symphony No. 1, Op. 6 (1894)
Henry Kimball Hadley Symphony No. 3, Op. 60 (1906)[4]
Alfred Hill Symphony No. 3 "Australia" (1951)[1]
Jānis Ivanovs Symphony No. 8 (1956)
Jan Kalivoda Symphony No. 5 Op. 106 (1840/1?)[5]
Heino Kaski Symphony (1919)
Rued Langgaard Symphony No. 1 BVN 32 (1908–11)
Sergei Lyapunov Symphony No. 1, Op. 12 (1887)
Boris Lyatoshinsky Symphony No. 2, Op. 26 (1935–36, rev. 1940)
Symphony No. 3, Op. 50 "To the 25th Anniversary of the October Revolution" (1951)
Miguel Marqués Symphony No. 3
Aarre Merikanto  [nl], Op. 5 (1916)
Vano Muradeli Symphony No. 1 "To the Memory of Kirov" (1938)[6]
Nikolai Myaskovsky  [nl] (1922) (nominally in the key)
Symphony No. 22, Op. 54 (1941)
Ludolf Nielsen Symphony No. 1, Op. 3 (1902/03)
Karl von Ordonez Symphony Brown I:Bm1
Ignacy Jan Paderewski Symphony "Polonia", Op. 24 (completed 1908)
Hubert Parry 'Symphonic Fantasia 1912' (Symphony No. 5) (1912)
Wilhelm Peterson-Berger Symphony No. 5 Solitude (1932–33)
Johann Rufinatscha Symphony No. 4 (1846)[7]
Joly Braga Santos Symphony No. 2, Op. 13 (1948)
Martin Scherber Symphony No. 3 (1952–55)
Franz Schubert Symphony No. 8, D 759 "Unfinished"
Dmitri Shostakovich Symphony No. 6, Op. 54 (1939)
Leo Sowerby Symphony No. 2[8]
Louis Spohr Symphony No. 9, Op. 143 'Die Jahreszeiten' (1850)[9]
Heikki Suolahti Sinfonia Piccola (1935)
Yevgeny Svetlanov Symphony No. 1, Op. 13 (1956)
Wilhelm Taubert Symphony, Op.80 (pub. 1851)[10]
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Manfred Symphony, Op. 58 (1885)
Symphony No. 6, Op. 74 "Pathétique"
Charles Tournemire Symphony No. 8, Op. 51 "La Triomphe de la Mort"
Max Trapp Symphony No. 2, Op. 15
Eduard Tubin Symphony No. 5 (1946)
Mieczysław Weinberg  [nl], Op. 45 (1949-1950 June, revision 1959)
Felix Weingartner Symphony No. 6, Op. 74 "in Gedenken des 19. November 1828"

References[]

  1. ^ a b Herman, Michael (July 2007). "British Symphonies on CD (Page 1)". Retrieved 28 August 2008.
  2. ^ "Description of CD with Collins' Symphony". Retrieved 25 March 2009.
  3. ^ Dearling, Robert (1982), The Music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: The Symphonies at Google Books, p. 131. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 0-8386-2335-2.
  4. ^ Free Library of Philadelphia Catalog Entry
  5. ^ Dörffel, Alfred (1884). Geschichte der Gewandhausconcerte zu Leipzig vom 25. November 1781 bis 25. November 1881 at Google Books, page 31.
  6. ^ "List of US Premieres by the Chicago Symphony (including Muradeli's First Symphony)". Retrieved 29 August 2008.
  7. ^ Not numbered by the composer. Recently renumbered from "5" to "4" by the composer's official society.
  8. ^ "List of Chicago Symphony Orchestra Premieres 1916–1940". Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  9. ^ Robinson, Bradford (2006). "Preface to Score of Spohr's Ninth Symphony". Musikproduktion Juergen Hoeflich. Archived from the original on 11 February 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  10. ^ Date from Hofmeisters Monatsbericht; score available at IMSLP and from this Danish library source. Probably symphony no.4, though numbering not certain.

See also[]

For symphonies in other keys, see List of symphonies by key.

Retrieved from ""