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Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44
Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44

Hal Leonard Publishing Corp - 7935

Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44

Sale price$59.95
SKU: 51481234

Composer: Antonin Dvorak

Publisher: Henle Verlag

Instrument: Mixed

Quantity:
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Dvorak Wind Serenade in d minor Op. 44

Juilliard Store

Pickup available, usually ready in 2 hours

144 West 66th Street
New York NY 10023
United States

+12127995000

For 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (B flat/A), 2 bassoons, double bassoon, 3 horns (2 in F/E, 1 in B flat/D, with additional part in F), violoncello, double bass

Level of difficulty: medium to difficult

  • One of the most important works for wind chamber music
  • Urtext edition following the autograph reading and the print version as proof-read by the composer
  • Preface expounds on new findings on the genesis and premiere recital
  • Ideal page-turns
  • For advanced amateurs, students and professionals

 

When Dvorák wrote his Serenade for 10 winds and 2 lower strings in January 1878, the heyday of the great wind serenades and “Harmoniemusik” wind ensembles was already long gone. He was probably inspired by hearing Mozart's Gran Partita shortly beforehand in Vienna. The home key of d minor here is striking, as is the often serious, even tragic atmosphere that repeatedly darkens the otherwise cheerful mood that is typical of the serenade genre. Perhaps this was a reaction to the death of two of his children just a few months earlier. Despite the work's dramatic character - or perhaps because of it - Dvorák's Serenade was taken up in many European cities soon after its first performance in Prague, and fêted as a significant contribution to the chamber music repertoire for wind instruments. The autograph sources in Prague have been consulted for this Urtext edition. The parts are printed with player-friendly page divisions, perfect page-turning opportunities, and practical alternative parts in F for the three horns.