fbpx
Wikipedia

Symphony No. 9 (Dvořák)

The Symphony No. 9 in E minor, "From the New World", Op. 95, B. 178 (Czech: Symfonie č. 9 e moll "Z nového světa"), popularly known as the New World Symphony, was composed by Antonín Dvořák in 1893 while he was the director of the National Conservatory of Music of America from 1892 to 1895. It premiered in New York City on 16 December 1893.[1] It is one of the most popular of all symphonies.[2] In older literature and recordings, this symphony was – as for its first publication – numbered as Symphony No. 5. Astronaut Neil Armstrong took a tape recording of the New World Symphony along during the Apollo 11 mission, the first Moon landing, in 1969.[3] The symphony was completed in the building that now houses the Bily Clocks Museum in Spillville, Iowa.[4]

Symphony No. 9
New World Symphony
by Antonín Dvořák
Title page of the autograph score of Dvořák's ninth symphony
KeyE minor
CatalogueB. 178
Opus95
Composed1893 (1893)
Movements4
Premiere
Date16 December 1893
LocationCarnegie Hall, New York City
ConductorAnton Seidl
PerformersNew York Philharmonic

Instrumentation

 
Opening English horn theme from the second movement of the work

This symphony is scored for the following orchestra:

Form

A typical performance usually lasts around 40 minutes. The work is in four movements:

  1. Adagio, 4
    8
    Allegro molto, 2
    4
    , E minor
  2. Largo,  , begins E major to D major, then later C minor
  3. Scherzo: Molto vivace – Poco sostenuto, 3
    4
    , E minor, Trio in C major
  4. Finale: Allegro con fuoco,  , E minor, ends in E major on a Picardy third over an altered form of the plagal cadence

I. Adagio – Allegro molto

 

The movement is written in sonata form and begins with an introductory leitmotif in Adagio. This melodic outline also appears in the third movement of Dvořák's String Quintet No. 3 in E major and his Humoresque No. 1. The exposition is based on three thematic subjects. The first in E minor is notable for its announcing and responsive phrases. The second is in G minor and undergoes a transformation such that it resembles a Czech polka. The exposition's closing theme in G major is known for being similar to the African-American spiritual "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot". The development primarily focuses on the main and closing themes, and the recapitulation consists of a repetition of the main theme as well as a transposition of the second and closing themes up a semitone. The movement is concluded with a coda, with the main theme stated by the brass above an orchestral tutti.[1]

II. Largo

 

The second movement is introduced by a harmonic progression of chords in the wind instruments. Beckerman interprets these chords as a musical rendition of the narrative formula "Once upon a time".[1] Then a solo cor anglais (English horn) plays the famous main theme in D-flat major accompanied by muted strings. Dvořák was said to have changed the theme from clarinet to cor anglais as it reminded him of the voice of Harry Burleigh. The movement's middle section contains a passage in C minor evoking a nostalgic and desolate mood which eventually leads into a funeral march above pizzicato steps in the basses. It is followed by a quasi-scherzo that incorporates this movement's theme as well as the first movement's main and closing themes. The Largo is concluded with the soft return of the main theme and introductory chords.

III. Molto vivace

 

The movement is a scherzo written in ternary form, with influences from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's The Song of Hiawatha. The stirring rhythm of the first part is interrupted by a trio middle section. The first part is then repeated, followed by an echo in the coda of the first movement's main theme.[1]

IV. Allegro con fuoco

 

The final movement is also written in sonata form. After a brief introduction, the horns and trumpets declare the movement's main theme against sharp chords played by the rest of the orchestra. The second theme is then presented by the clarinet above tremolos in the strings. The development not only works with these two themes but also recalls the main themes of the first and second movements and a fragment of the Scherzo. Following the recapitulation which begins in the unexpected key of G minor but later corrects itself back to the original key, the movement reaches its climax in the coda, in which materials from the first three movements are reviewed for a final time while the Picardy third is expanded after the orchestra triumphantly plays a "modally altered" plagal cadence.[5] The main theme, especially its occurrence in bar 321, bears a close resemblance to the opening theme of the Hans Heiling Overture by Heinrich Marschner.

Influences

Dvořák was interested in Native American music and the African-American spirituals he heard in North America. While director of the National Conservatory he encountered an African-American student, Harry T. Burleigh, who sang traditional spirituals to him. Burleigh, later a composer himself, said that Dvořák had absorbed their "spirit" before writing his own melodies.[6] Dvořák stated:

I am convinced that the future music of this country must be founded on what are called Negro melodies. These can be the foundation of a serious and original school of composition, to be developed in the United States. These beautiful and varied themes are the product of the soil. They are the folk songs of America and your composers must turn to them.[7]

The symphony was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic, and premiered on 16 December 1893, at Carnegie Hall conducted by Anton Seidl. A day earlier, in an article published in the New York Herald on 15 December 1893, Dvořák further explained how Native American music influenced his symphony:

I have not actually used any of the [Native American] melodies. I have simply written original themes embodying the peculiarities of the Indian music, and, using these themes as subjects, have developed them with all the resources of modern rhythms, counterpoint, and orchestral colour.[8]

In the same article, Dvořák stated that he regarded the symphony's second movement as a "sketch or study for a later work, either a cantata or opera ... which will be based upon Longfellow's Hiawatha"[9] (Dvořák never actually wrote such a piece).[9] He also wrote that the third movement scherzo was "suggested by the scene at the feast in Hiawatha where the Indians dance".[9]

In 1893, a newspaper interview quoted Dvořák as saying "I found that the music of the negroes and of the Indians was practically identical", and that "the music of the two races bore a remarkable similarity to the music of Scotland".[10][11] Most historians agree that Dvořák is referring to the pentatonic scale, which is typical of each of these musical traditions.[12]

In a 2008 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education, prominent musicologist Joseph Horowitz states that African-American spirituals were a major influence on Dvořák's music written in North America, quoting him from an 1893 interview in the New York Herald as saying, "In the negro melodies of America I discover all that is needed for a great and noble school of music."[13] Dvořák did, it seems, borrow rhythms from the music of his native Bohemia, as notably in his Slavonic Dances, and the pentatonic scale in some of his music written in North America from African-American and/or Native American sources. Statements that he borrowed melodies are often made but seldom supported by specifics. One verified example is the song of the Scarlet Tanager in the Quartet. Michael Steinberg writes[14] that a flute solo theme in the first movement of the symphony resembles the spiritual "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot".[15] Leonard Bernstein averred that the symphony was truly multinational in its foundations.[16]

Dvořák was influenced not only by music he had heard but also by what he had seen in America. He wrote that he would not have composed his American pieces as he had if he had not seen America.[17] It has been said that Dvořák was inspired by the "wide open spaces" of America, such as prairies he may have seen on his trip to Iowa in the summer of 1893.[18] Notices about several performances of the symphony include the phrase "wide open spaces" about what inspired the symphony and/or about the feelings it conveys to listeners.[c]

Dvořák was also influenced by the style and techniques used by earlier classical composers including Beethoven and Schubert.[19] The falling fourths and timpani strokes in the New World Symphony's Scherzo movement evoke the Scherzo of Beethoven's Choral Symphony (Symphony No. 9). The use of flashbacks to prior movements in the New World Symphony's last movement is reminiscent of Beethoven quoting prior movements in the opening Presto of the Choral Symphony's final movement.[1]

Reception

At the premiere in Carnegie Hall, the end of every movement was met with thunderous clapping and Dvořák felt obliged to stand up and bow.[2] This was one of the greatest public triumphs of Dvořák's career. When the symphony was published, several European orchestras soon performed it. Alexander Mackenzie conducted the London Philharmonic Society in the first London performance on 21 June 1894.[2] Clapham says the symphony became "one of the most popular of all time" and at a time when the composer's main works were being welcomed in no more than ten countries, this symphony reached the rest of the musical world and has become a "universal favorite".[2] As of 1978, it had been performed more often "than any other symphony at the Royal Festival Hall, London" and is in "tremendous demand in Japan".[2]

"Goin' Home"

The theme from the Largo was adapted into the spiritual-like song "Goin' Home" (often mistakenly considered a folk song or traditional spiritual) by Dvořák's pupil William Arms Fisher, who wrote the lyrics in 1922.[20][21][22][23]

In the UK, the theme became familiar to the general public after its use in an advert for the Hovis bakery.[24]

In 1981, Don Williams would record a different song written to the melody, by Roger Cook. The resulting composition, "Miracles", would peak at number 4 on the Billboard country singles chart that July, and also reach number 32 on the adult contemporary chart.[citation needed]

In popular culture

  • The piece, IV. Allegro con fuoco, is known for the entrance theme of professional wrestler Gunther and that of his stable, Imperium.[25]
  • There are several bosses in video games, including Augus from Asura's Wrath, Fahad from The Finale – Tale of the Fallen and Doggo from Deer simulator, who have the fourth movement of the symphony play throughput their respective fights.
  • Parts of the first movement also feature during cutsceens in Colony Wars: Vengeance
  • In the Korean television program Kingdom, the group Ateez mixed it with their song Wonderland.
  • The 2008 novel From the New World by Yusuke Kishi is titled after Dvořák's Symphony No. 9, whose Movement II appears in the story several times.
  • The anime One Piece used the fourth movement of the symphony during the fight against Sir Crocodile.
  • "New World Symphony" is the title of the fifteenth act of the anime film Night on the Galactic Railroad, in which the symphony's second movement briefly plays. The piece was a favorite of the source novel's author, Kenji Miyazawa.

Notes

  1. ^ The scoring of piccolo in this symphony is unusual; although the English horn is brought in for the solo in the second movement, the piccolo plays only a short phrase in the first, and nothing else.
  2. ^ Tuba is only scored in the second movement. According to the full score book published by Dover, Trombone basso e Tuba is indicated in some measures in the second movement; the bass trombone is used with the two other trombones in movements 1, 2 and 4.
  3. ^ For example, the Chicago Symphony, 19 June 2009.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Symphony No. 9 "From the New World"". Antonín Dvořák. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e Clapham, John, Dvořák, Norton, New York, 1979, pp. 132–133.
  3. ^ Wagener, Leon (2005). One Giant Leap: Neil Armstrong's Stellar American Journey. Tom Doherty Associates. p. 176. ISBN 9781466828568.
  4. ^ Pohlen, Jerome (1 April 2005). Oddball Iowa: A Guide to Some Really Strange Places. Chicago Review Press. p. 100. ISBN 9781569764688.
  5. ^ Cross, Milton; Ewen, David (1962). "Antonín Dvořák". Milton Cross' Encyclopedia of the Great Composers and Their Music. Vol. 1. Garden City, New York: Doubleday and Company, Inc. p. 239. LCCN 62008097.
  6. ^ Jean E. Snyder, "A great and noble school of music: Dvořák, Harry T. Burleigh, and the African American Spiritual", in Tibbets, John C., editor, Dvorak in America: 1892–1895, Amadeus Press, Portland, Oregon, 1993, p. 131.
  7. ^ Gutmann, Peter. "Dvorak's "New World" Symphony". Classical Classics. Classical Notes. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
  8. ^ Neas, Patrick (4 March 2017). "The Classical Beat: ... Dvorak at Helzberg Hall". Kansas City Star. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
  9. ^ a b c Beckerman, Michael. "About the Hiawatha Melodrama" (PDF). josephhorowitz.com. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  10. ^ Kerkering, John D.; Gelpi, Albert; Posnock, Ross (2003). The Poetics of National and Racial Identity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-83114-8.
  11. ^ Beckerman, Michael Brim (2003). New Worlds of Dvorak: Searching in America for the Composer's Inner Life. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-393-04706-7.
  12. ^ Clapham, John (1958). "The Evolution of Dvorak's Symphony "From the New World"". The Musical Quarterly. Oxford University Press (2): 167–183. doi:10.1093/mq/XLIV.2.167.
  13. ^ Horowitz, Joseph (11 January 2008). "New World Symphony and Discord". The Chronicle of Higher Education.(subscription required)
  14. ^ Michael Steinberg, The Symphony: A Listener's Guide, Oxford University Press, 1995, p. 152
  15. ^ "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" was written by Wallis Willis, a Native American of the Choctaw Nation and former slave, and popularized by the African-American Fisk Jubilee Singers
  16. ^ Leonard Bernstein: 1953 American Decca recordings. DGG 477 0002. Comments on the 2nd compact disc.
  17. ^ Letter to Emil Kozanek, 15 September 1893, translated in Letters of Composers, edited by Gertrude Norman and Miriam Lubell Shrifte (1946, Alfred A. Knopf, New York).
  18. ^ Sullivan, Jack (1999), New World Symphonies: How American Culture Changed European Music, Yale University Press, p. ix
  19. ^ "Antonín Dvorák (1841–1904)". Retrieved 8 December 2014.
  20. ^ Otakar Šourek, Antonín Dvořák: his life and works, Philosophical library, 1954, p. 59; Glenn Watkins, Proof through the night: music and the Great War, Volume 1, University of California Press, 2003, p. 273.
  21. ^ Keller, James M. (c. 2013). . San Francisco Symphony. Archived from the original on 18 April 2013. Retrieved 13 May 2013.
  22. ^ Franya J. Berkman, Monument Eternal: The Music of Alice Coltrane, Wesleyan University Press, 2010, p. 88.
  23. ^ Smith, Jane Stuart; Carlson, Betty (1995). The Gift of Music: Great Composers and Their Influence. Crossway Books. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-89107-869-2. Retrieved 9 September 2012. The largo of the second movement has a hauntingly beautiful melody played by the English horn. There is a sense of longing about it, and a spiritual has been adapted from it, 'Going Home'
  24. ^ "Hovis 'Boy on the Bike' advert returns to TV with new music – here's a first look".
  25. ^ "Wrestlers who used classic music as their theme songs". Thesporters. 15 April 2021. Retrieved 31 August 2022.

Further reading

  • Beckerman, Michael, ed. (1993). "The Master's Little Joke". Dvořák and his World. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 134–436. ISBN 0-691-03386-2.
  • Brown, A. Peter (2003). The symphonic repertoire. Vol. 4. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 410–436. ISBN 0-253-33488-8.
  • Philip Henry Goepp [in Catalan] (1913). Symphonies and their meaning: Third series: Modern symphonies. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company. pp. 195–207.
  • Kurt Honolka (2004). Dvořák. London: Haus Publishing. ISBN 1-904341-52-7.

External links

symphony, dvořák, world, symphony, redirects, here, miami, based, orchestra, world, symphony, orchestra, former, york, orchestra, symphony, world, symphony, minor, from, world, czech, symfonie, moll, nového, světa, popularly, known, world, symphony, composed, . New World Symphony redirects here For the Miami based orchestra see New World Symphony orchestra For the former New York orchestra see Symphony of the New World The Symphony No 9 in E minor From the New World Op 95 B 178 Czech Symfonie c 9 e moll Z noveho sveta popularly known as the New World Symphony was composed by Antonin Dvorak in 1893 while he was the director of the National Conservatory of Music of America from 1892 to 1895 It premiered in New York City on 16 December 1893 1 It is one of the most popular of all symphonies 2 In older literature and recordings this symphony was as for its first publication numbered as Symphony No 5 Astronaut Neil Armstrong took a tape recording of the New World Symphony along during the Apollo 11 mission the first Moon landing in 1969 3 The symphony was completed in the building that now houses the Bily Clocks Museum in Spillville Iowa 4 Symphony No 9New World Symphonyby Antonin DvorakTitle page of the autograph score of Dvorak s ninth symphonyKeyE minorCatalogueB 178Opus95Composed1893 1893 Movements4PremiereDate16 December 1893LocationCarnegie Hall New York CityConductorAnton SeidlPerformersNew York Philharmonic Contents 1 Instrumentation 2 Form 2 1 I Adagio Allegro molto 2 2 II Largo 2 3 III Molto vivace 2 4 IV Allegro con fuoco 3 Influences 4 Reception 5 Goin Home 6 In popular culture 7 Notes 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksInstrumentation Edit Opening English horn theme from the second movement of the work This symphony is scored for the following orchestra 2 flutes one doubling piccolo a 2 oboes one doubling English horn 2 clarinets in B flat amp A 2 bassoons 4 horns in E C and F 2 trumpets in E C and E Alto trombone Tenor trombone Bass trombone Tuba second movement only b Timpani Triangle third movement only Cymbals fourth movement only StringsForm Edit I Adagio Allegro molto source source II Largo source source III Scherzo Molto vivace source source IV Allegro con fuoco source source Problems playing these files See media help A typical performance usually lasts around 40 minutes The work is in four movements Adagio 48 Allegro molto 24 E minorLargo begins E major to D major then later C minorScherzo Molto vivace Poco sostenuto 34 E minor Trio in C majorFinale Allegro con fuoco E minor ends in E major on a Picardy third over an altered form of the plagal cadence I Adagio Allegro molto Edit The movement is written in sonata form and begins with an introductory leitmotif in Adagio This melodic outline also appears in the third movement of Dvorak s String Quintet No 3 in E major and his Humoresque No 1 The exposition is based on three thematic subjects The first in E minor is notable for its announcing and responsive phrases The second is in G minor and undergoes a transformation such that it resembles a Czech polka The exposition s closing theme in G major is known for being similar to the African American spiritual Swing Low Sweet Chariot The development primarily focuses on the main and closing themes and the recapitulation consists of a repetition of the main theme as well as a transposition of the second and closing themes up a semitone The movement is concluded with a coda with the main theme stated by the brass above an orchestral tutti 1 II Largo Edit The second movement is introduced by a harmonic progression of chords in the wind instruments Beckerman interprets these chords as a musical rendition of the narrative formula Once upon a time 1 Then a solo cor anglais English horn plays the famous main theme in D flat major accompanied by muted strings Dvorak was said to have changed the theme from clarinet to cor anglais as it reminded him of the voice of Harry Burleigh The movement s middle section contains a passage in C minor evoking a nostalgic and desolate mood which eventually leads into a funeral march above pizzicato steps in the basses It is followed by a quasi scherzo that incorporates this movement s theme as well as the first movement s main and closing themes The Largo is concluded with the soft return of the main theme and introductory chords III Molto vivace Edit The movement is a scherzo written in ternary form with influences from Henry Wadsworth Longfellow s The Song of Hiawatha The stirring rhythm of the first part is interrupted by a trio middle section The first part is then repeated followed by an echo in the coda of the first movement s main theme 1 IV Allegro con fuoco Edit The final movement is also written in sonata form After a brief introduction the horns and trumpets declare the movement s main theme against sharp chords played by the rest of the orchestra The second theme is then presented by the clarinet above tremolos in the strings The development not only works with these two themes but also recalls the main themes of the first and second movements and a fragment of the Scherzo Following the recapitulation which begins in the unexpected key of G minor but later corrects itself back to the original key the movement reaches its climax in the coda in which materials from the first three movements are reviewed for a final time while the Picardy third is expanded after the orchestra triumphantly plays a modally altered plagal cadence 5 The main theme especially its occurrence in bar 321 bears a close resemblance to the opening theme of the Hans Heiling Overture by Heinrich Marschner Influences EditDvorak was interested in Native American music and the African American spirituals he heard in North America While director of the National Conservatory he encountered an African American student Harry T Burleigh who sang traditional spirituals to him Burleigh later a composer himself said that Dvorak had absorbed their spirit before writing his own melodies 6 Dvorak stated I am convinced that the future music of this country must be founded on what are called Negro melodies These can be the foundation of a serious and original school of composition to be developed in the United States These beautiful and varied themes are the product of the soil They are the folk songs of America and your composers must turn to them 7 The symphony was commissioned by the New York Philharmonic and premiered on 16 December 1893 at Carnegie Hall conducted by Anton Seidl A day earlier in an article published in the New York Herald on 15 December 1893 Dvorak further explained how Native American music influenced his symphony I have not actually used any of the Native American melodies I have simply written original themes embodying the peculiarities of the Indian music and using these themes as subjects have developed them with all the resources of modern rhythms counterpoint and orchestral colour 8 In the same article Dvorak stated that he regarded the symphony s second movement as a sketch or study for a later work either a cantata or opera which will be based upon Longfellow s Hiawatha 9 Dvorak never actually wrote such a piece 9 He also wrote that the third movement scherzo was suggested by the scene at the feast in Hiawatha where the Indians dance 9 In 1893 a newspaper interview quoted Dvorak as saying I found that the music of the negroes and of the Indians was practically identical and that the music of the two races bore a remarkable similarity to the music of Scotland 10 11 Most historians agree that Dvorak is referring to the pentatonic scale which is typical of each of these musical traditions 12 In a 2008 article in The Chronicle of Higher Education prominent musicologist Joseph Horowitz states that African American spirituals were a major influence on Dvorak s music written in North America quoting him from an 1893 interview in the New York Herald as saying In the negro melodies of America I discover all that is needed for a great and noble school of music 13 Dvorak did it seems borrow rhythms from the music of his native Bohemia as notably in his Slavonic Dances and the pentatonic scale in some of his music written in North America from African American and or Native American sources Statements that he borrowed melodies are often made but seldom supported by specifics One verified example is the song of the Scarlet Tanager in the Quartet Michael Steinberg writes 14 that a flute solo theme in the first movement of the symphony resembles the spiritual Swing Low Sweet Chariot 15 Leonard Bernstein averred that the symphony was truly multinational in its foundations 16 Dvorak was influenced not only by music he had heard but also by what he had seen in America He wrote that he would not have composed his American pieces as he had if he had not seen America 17 It has been said that Dvorak was inspired by the wide open spaces of America such as prairies he may have seen on his trip to Iowa in the summer of 1893 18 Notices about several performances of the symphony include the phrase wide open spaces about what inspired the symphony and or about the feelings it conveys to listeners c Dvorak was also influenced by the style and techniques used by earlier classical composers including Beethoven and Schubert 19 The falling fourths and timpani strokes in the New World Symphony s Scherzo movement evoke the Scherzo of Beethoven s Choral Symphony Symphony No 9 The use of flashbacks to prior movements in the New World Symphony s last movement is reminiscent of Beethoven quoting prior movements in the opening Presto of the Choral Symphony s final movement 1 Reception EditAt the premiere in Carnegie Hall the end of every movement was met with thunderous clapping and Dvorak felt obliged to stand up and bow 2 This was one of the greatest public triumphs of Dvorak s career When the symphony was published several European orchestras soon performed it Alexander Mackenzie conducted the London Philharmonic Society in the first London performance on 21 June 1894 2 Clapham says the symphony became one of the most popular of all time and at a time when the composer s main works were being welcomed in no more than ten countries this symphony reached the rest of the musical world and has become a universal favorite 2 As of 1978 it had been performed more often than any other symphony at the Royal Festival Hall London and is in tremendous demand in Japan 2 Goin Home Edit Goin Home source source Performed by the United States Air Force Band Problems playing this file See media help The theme from the Largo was adapted into the spiritual like song Goin Home often mistakenly considered a folk song or traditional spiritual by Dvorak s pupil William Arms Fisher who wrote the lyrics in 1922 20 21 22 23 In the UK the theme became familiar to the general public after its use in an advert for the Hovis bakery 24 In 1981 Don Williams would record a different song written to the melody by Roger Cook The resulting composition Miracles would peak at number 4 on the Billboard country singles chart that July and also reach number 32 on the adult contemporary chart citation needed In popular culture EditThe piece IV Allegro con fuoco is known for the entrance theme of professional wrestler Gunther and that of his stable Imperium 25 There are several bosses in video games including Augus from Asura s Wrath Fahad from The Finale Tale of the Fallen and Doggo from Deer simulator who have the fourth movement of the symphony play throughput their respective fights Parts of the first movement also feature during cutsceens in Colony Wars Vengeance In the Korean television program Kingdom the group Ateez mixed it with their song Wonderland The 2008 novel From the New World by Yusuke Kishi is titled after Dvorak s Symphony No 9 whose Movement II appears in the story several times The anime One Piece used the fourth movement of the symphony during the fight against Sir Crocodile New World Symphony is the title of the fifteenth act of the anime film Night on the Galactic Railroad in which the symphony s second movement briefly plays The piece was a favorite of the source novel s author Kenji Miyazawa Notes Edit The scoring of piccolo in this symphony is unusual although the English horn is brought in for the solo in the second movement the piccolo plays only a short phrase in the first and nothing else Tuba is only scored in the second movement According to the full score book published by Dover Trombone basso e Tuba is indicated in some measures in the second movement the bass trombone is used with the two other trombones in movements 1 2 and 4 For example the Chicago Symphony 19 June 2009 See also EditSymphony No 9 Beethoven Ode to Joy Choral Fantasy Beethoven Piano Concerto No 1 Tchaikovsky Symphony No 8 Schubert References Edit a b c d e Symphony No 9 From the New World Antonin Dvorak Retrieved 1 October 2020 a b c d e Clapham John Dvorak Norton New York 1979 pp 132 133 Wagener Leon 2005 One Giant Leap Neil Armstrong s Stellar American Journey Tom Doherty Associates p 176 ISBN 9781466828568 Pohlen Jerome 1 April 2005 Oddball Iowa A Guide to Some Really Strange Places Chicago Review Press p 100 ISBN 9781569764688 Cross Milton Ewen David 1962 Antonin Dvorak Milton Cross Encyclopedia of the Great Composers and Their Music Vol 1 Garden City New York Doubleday and Company Inc p 239 LCCN 62008097 Jean E Snyder A great and noble school of music Dvorak Harry T Burleigh and the African American Spiritual in Tibbets John C editor Dvorak in America 1892 1895 Amadeus Press Portland Oregon 1993 p 131 Gutmann Peter Dvorak s New World Symphony Classical Classics Classical Notes Retrieved 9 September 2012 Neas Patrick 4 March 2017 The Classical Beat Dvorak at Helzberg Hall Kansas City Star Retrieved 15 November 2018 a b c Beckerman Michael About the Hiawatha Melodrama PDF josephhorowitz com Retrieved 26 September 2012 Kerkering John D Gelpi Albert Posnock Ross 2003 The Poetics of National and Racial Identity in Nineteenth Century American Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 83114 8 Beckerman Michael Brim 2003 New Worlds of Dvorak Searching in America for the Composer s Inner Life W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 04706 7 Clapham John 1958 The Evolution of Dvorak s Symphony From the New World The Musical Quarterly Oxford University Press 2 167 183 doi 10 1093 mq XLIV 2 167 Horowitz Joseph 11 January 2008 New World Symphony and Discord The Chronicle of Higher Education subscription required Michael Steinberg The Symphony A Listener s Guide Oxford University Press 1995 p 152 Swing Low Sweet Chariot was written by Wallis Willis a Native American of the Choctaw Nation and former slave and popularized by the African American Fisk Jubilee Singers Leonard Bernstein 1953 American Decca recordings DGG 477 0002 Comments on the 2nd compact disc Letter to Emil Kozanek 15 September 1893 translated in Letters of Composers edited by Gertrude Norman and Miriam Lubell Shrifte 1946 Alfred A Knopf New York Sullivan Jack 1999 New World Symphonies How American Culture Changed European Music Yale University Press p ix Antonin Dvorak 1841 1904 Retrieved 8 December 2014 Otakar Sourek Antonin Dvorak his life and works Philosophical library 1954 p 59 Glenn Watkins Proof through the night music and the Great War Volume 1 University of California Press 2003 p 273 Keller James M c 2013 Program Notes Dvorak Symphony No 9 in E minor Opus 95 From the New World San Francisco Symphony Archived from the original on 18 April 2013 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Franya J Berkman Monument Eternal The Music of Alice Coltrane Wesleyan University Press 2010 p 88 Smith Jane Stuart Carlson Betty 1995 The Gift of Music Great Composers and Their Influence Crossway Books p 157 ISBN 978 0 89107 869 2 Retrieved 9 September 2012 The largo of the second movement has a hauntingly beautiful melody played by the English horn There is a sense of longing about it and a spiritual has been adapted from it Going Home Hovis Boy on the Bike advert returns to TV with new music here s a first look Wrestlers who used classic music as their theme songs Thesporters 15 April 2021 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Further reading EditBeckerman Michael ed 1993 The Master s Little Joke Dvorak and his World Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 134 436 ISBN 0 691 03386 2 Brown A Peter 2003 The symphonic repertoire Vol 4 Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 410 436 ISBN 0 253 33488 8 Philip Henry Goepp in Catalan 1913 Symphonies and their meaning Third series Modern symphonies Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company pp 195 207 Kurt Honolka 2004 Dvorak London Haus Publishing ISBN 1 904341 52 7 External links EditSymphony No 9 Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Score from Indiana University Score from Mutopia Project A visual analysis of the first movement on YouTube True Story of Goin Home From Bohemia to Boston Performance of Goin Home by the New York Festival of Song from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in MP3 format New World Symphony Complete listing of the recordings in French MusicaBohemica Original manuscript parts at the New York Philharmonic Archives Portal Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Symphony No 9 Dvorak amp oldid 1137092190, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.