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symphony

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Dictionary: sym·pho·ny   (sĭm'fə-nē) pronunciation
 
n., pl. -nies.
  1. Music.
    1. An extended piece in three or more movements for symphony orchestra.
    2. An instrumental passage in a vocal or choral composition.
    3. An instrumental overture or interlude, as in early opera.
  2. Music.
    1. A symphony orchestra.
    2. An orchestral concert.
  3. Harmony, especially of sound or color.
  4. Something characterized by a harmonious combination of elements.

[Middle English symphonye, harmony, from Old French symphonie, from Latin symphōnia, from Greek sumphōniā, from sumphōnos, harmonious : sun-, syn- + phōnē, sound.]


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Thesaurus: symphony
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noun

    Pleasing agreement, as of musical sounds: accord, concert, concord, harmony, tune. Music consonance. See beautiful/ugly.

 
Music Encyclopedia: Symphony
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An extended work for orchestra, usually in three or four movements. It is traditionally regarded as the central form of orchestral composition. In the 17th century the term was used in other senses: for concerted motets (e.g. Schütz's Symphoniae sacrae), for introductory movements to operas etc (see Overture), for instrumental introductions and sections within arias and ensembles, and for ensemble pieces which might be classified as sonatas or concertos (see Sinfomia).

Features of the Classical symphony may be traced to the Italian overture of the late 17th century in three movements (fast-slow-fast). With Italian opera composers such as Leo, Pergolesi, Galuppi and Jommelli, the movements became longer and more developed. G. B. Sammartini was among the first Italians to write concert symphonies; composers of the next generation, including Boccherini and Pugnani, inherited his essentially lyrical approach, but Italian composers were not generally interested in the richer, more developed style favoured in Austria and Germany.

Many composers of the new symphony were active in London, Paris, north Germany and elsewhere, but the main centres were Vienna and Mannheim. About 1735 the Viennese symphony, drawing on the opera overture and chamber music, began to establish an independent course, notably in the works of Monn and Wagenseil. They and their younger contemporaries, Gassmann and Ordonez, continued to prefer three-movement form, but with four prolific gifted composers - Hofmann, Dittersdorf, Vanhal and Michael Haydn - the four-movement symphony, with minuet and trio preceding the finale, became the norm. Their works represent the highest achievements in the Viennese Classical symphony apart from Haydn and Mozart. At Mannheim, where the electoral court assembled a concentration of talent, the virtuosity and discipline of the court orchestra led to new developments in orchestral style, particularly ones involving the striking use of dynamics and the stylized use of melodic figures. J. W. A. Stamitz provided the model and the motivation; his ‘army of generals’ included such names as F. X. Richter, Holzbauer, Antonín Fils and, among the next generation, Toeschi, Cannabich, Eichner, Beck and Stamitz's son Carl.

The achievements of Haydn and Mozart place them far above any of these local groupings. Haydn's appointment at the Esterházy court in 1761 required a steady production of symphonies: he responded with many fine examples, often building whole expositions on a single thematic idea and exploiting the unexpected. His supreme achievements began with six symphonies written for Paris in 1785, with their new heights of ingenuity, humour and unpretentious intellectuality; the last symphonies (nos. 93-104), written for London, exceed even these in breadth of conception, melodic appeal and magisterial command.

As a child, Mozart met Italian-style symphonies through his friendship with J. C. Bach; his Austro-German background added harmonic depth, textural interest, subtlety of phrasing and orchestral virtuosity. In his early symphonies these and other influences appear. In his symphonies after 1773, one or other occasionally predominates (Parisian in no.31, Mannheim style and Italian form in no.32 etc), but stylistic conflicts and imbalances are resolved in symphonies which show increasing enlargement of scale and complexity of development and texture, leading to the remarkable depth and originality of his final masterpieces in the form, nos. 38-41.

Whatever the view of his contemporaries, the early 19th-century symphony is now typified by Beethoven. While his first two symphonies shared a development from Haydn's, no.3 was a departure: its four movements were on an unprecedentedly large scale, and its dedication to Napoleon (later erased) proclaimed that its grandeur and power celebrated personal courage and the unconquerable human spirit. The later symphonies work out in fresh terms the same type of struggle, and all end in triumph, for example in the brilliant C major finale of no.5 in C minor. No. 9, the Choral Symphony, is a solitary masterpiece, bringing together two projects that had long been in the composer's mind, a gigantic symphony in D minor and a choral setting of Schiller's Ode to Joy. Beethoven's achievements were such that the merits of Schubert's more lyrical ones were long overlooked, even those of the expansive yet often closely argued ‘Great C major’; while those of later composers tended to be judged by how they matched up to Beethoven's. The more conservative Romantics, notably Mendelssohn, Schumann and Brahms, remained broadly faithful to the Classical conception of the symphony even if they sometimes changed the number and order of its movements or sought new ways of unifying them, as Schumann did in his cyclic treatment in no.4. There is some ‘programmatic’ tendency, but it is rarely pursued by Mendelssohn beyond titles that evoke a source of the music's inspiration (‘Scottish’ ‘Italian’) or by Schumann beyond general atmosphere (‘Spring’, ‘Rhenish’- in which one unorthodox movement is specifically evocative of Cologne Cathedral). Brahms rejected even such mood painting, but nevertheless made far-reaching innovations within the standard four-movement pattern. There are motivic links within and between movements and elaborately worked contrapuntal textures, adding strength to his sonata-form structures. The finale of his fourth and last symphony, however, is cast in his own version of the Baroque passacaglia form. In the first three, he substituted a lyrical, intermezzo-like movement in moderate tempo for the Beethovenian scherzo. Another composer who may be classed as a conservative Romantic was Tchaikovsky, who adhered to the traditional forms even though his material was not always susceptible to the organic unity on which they depend. Several symphonies, notably no.4, involve the cyclic recall of themes; this may be connected with the programmatic content that he is believed to have followed and which no doubt (his programmes were not generally disclosed) governs the unorthodox use of a slow, despairing finale to his last symphony, no.6 (‘Pathetic’). At several points in his symphonies, notably no.4, he used Russian folk melodies but he did not, like the more overtly nationalist composers, adapt his style to accommodate a folk idiom.

While many of the more radical Romantics found a congenial outlet for their ideas and aspirations in the SYMPHONIC POEM, there were some for whom the symphony was a challenge. In the Symphonie fantastique and Harold en Italie Berlioz sought to unite the Beethoven conception of the symphony with his own penchant for descriptive, literary-inspired music by means of a recurrent idée fixe. His example was followed by Liszt's pupil d′Indy in the Symphonie sur un chant montagnard français. Lalo's Symphony and Saint-Saëns's Third also show Liszt's influence in their style and the use of thematic transformation, and Franck's D minor Symphony, although non-programmatic, goes further in that direction.

Although some nationalist composers, including Borodin and Balakirev in Russia and Dvořák in Bohemia, felt close enough to the centre of a tradition to contribute to the genre, by the end of the 19th century it had become largely a bastion of the orthodox. Only Bruckner succeeded in creating a new model, basing his symphonies first on Beethoven's Ninth and secondly on a Wagnerian expansiveness and (to some degree) style and orchestration. He extended the sonata-form tradition in some of his first movements to involve three rather than two thematic and tonal groups; wrote long and deeply contemplative adagios, often capped by a huge orchestral climax, and scherzos which often have a demoniacal drive contrasted with lyrical middle sections; and he extended finales, often again with three tonal areas, sometimes incorporating chorale-like material and (front no.3 onwards) ending with a recall of the symphony's opening theme.

The period 1901-18, during which Mahler, Sibelius, Elgar and (though his greatest symphonies came later) Nielsen were active, brought the Romantic symphony to its fullest maturity and to its end. The sense of an end is strongly present in the music of both Mahler and Elgar, and, although Sibelius's structural innovations (culminating in the single-movement Seventh Symphony of 1924) seemed to point a way forward, changes in the artistic climate and in the language of music after 1918 threatened to undermine the concept of the symphony. Avantgarde composers either did not write them or wrote symphonies in which received standards were deliberately outraged.

Composers closer to the 19th-century tradition, and particularly those whose music has retained links with tonality, have continued to write symphonies in the traditional mould (for example Ives, Honegger, Roussel, Prokofiev, Myaskovsky, Henze, Martinů, Vaughan Williams, Simpson, Tippett, Sessions, Harris and Vagn Holmboe). But among 20th-century composers of international stature, perhaps only Shostakovich, whose symphonies range from the political manifesto (nos. 2 and 3), the heroic and sometimes programmatic (nos. 7 and 10-12) to the bitterly ironic (nos. 13 and 14), has found in the symphony a natural vehicle for his most challenging and original music.



 

Long musical composition for orchestra, usually in several movements. The term (meaning "sounding together") came to be the standard name for instrumental episodes, and especially overtures, in early Italian opera. The late-17th-century Neapolitan opera overture, or sinfonia, as established especially by Alessandro Scarlatti c. 1780, had three movements, their tempos being fast-slow-fast. Soon such overtures began to be performed by themselves in concert settings, like another forerunner of the symphony, the concerto grosso. The two merged in the early 18th century in the symphonies of Giovanni Battista Sammartini (1700/01 – 75). In c. 1750 German and Viennese composers began to add a minuet movement. Joseph Haydn, the "father of the symphony," wrote more than 100 symphonies of remarkable originality, intensity, and brilliance in the years 1755 – 95; since Haydn, the symphony has been regarded as the most important orchestral genre. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote about 35 original symphonies. Ludwig van Beethoven's nine symphonies endowed the genre with enormous weight and ambition. Later symphonists include Franz Schubert, Felix Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann, Anton Bruckner, Johannes Brahms, Antonín Dvorák, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, and Gustav Mahler; their 20th-century successors include Ralph Vaughan Williams, Jean Sibelius, Dmitry Shostakovich, and Witold Lutoslawski.

For more information on symphony, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: symphony
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symphony [Gr.,=sounding together], a sonata for orchestra.

The Italian operatic overture, called sinfonia, was standardized by Alessandro Scarlatti at the end of the 17th cent. into three sections, the first and last being fast and the middle one slower in tempo. Since these sinfonie had little musical connection with the operas they preceded, they could be played alone in concert. It became customary in the early 18th cent. to write independent orchestral pieces in the same style, which were the first real symphonies.

G. B. Sammartini wrote a number of works that influenced and partially defined symphonic form and style. Johann Stamitz, who was leader of the Mannheim group of composers, was one of the first to add a second lyrical theme in the first movement and to expand the symphony's three movements to four. Other important contributions to the development of the symphony were made by C. P. E. Bach, Johann Christian Bach, C. H. Graun, and F. J. Gossec.

It was Haydn and Mozart, however, who synthesized the techniques of all preceding schools into the Viennese classical symphony. This composition consisted of four movements—the first, a fast sonata-form movement; the second, a slow movement; the third, a dance, usually a minuet; and the fourth, a fast finale, usually a rondo and frequently a combination of sonata form and rondo. Beethoven expanded the dimensions of this form and intensified the element of personal expression far beyond the styles of Haydn and Mozart. He also initiated the use of a chorus in the symphony.

After Beethoven the classical ideal was continued in the symphonies of Schubert, Mendelssohn, and Schumann, although the classical elements are often overshadowed by romantic traits—repetition in place of actual thematic development, profusion of themes rather than severely limited thematic material, and concern for mood and atmosphere in orchestral color and tone painting. Mainly through the device of thematic transformation, Berlioz adapted the symphonic style and form to program music in his Symphonie fantastique, a procedure that was transformed by Liszt into the symphonic poem and brought to its height by Richard Strauss.

Reacting strongly to the romantic orchestral style, Brahms revived the classical model as defined by Beethoven. Although his harmony, melodic formulas, and use of orchestral color are romantic, Brahms's formal designs and developmental procedures carry on and elaborate on the classical style. Bruckner combined classical formal outlines with the chromatic harmonies and extended melodic structures of the Wagnerian style, and his symphonies influenced those of Mahler in their huge orchestral dimensions. Other important romantic symphonists were Dvořák and Tchaikovsky in the 19th cent. and Sibelius in the 20th cent.

The symphony has been treated with unprecedented freedom by contemporary composers, as illustrated by Stravinsky's Symphony of Psalms, Bloch's Israel, which includes voices, Webern's Symphony for nine solo instruments, Hindemith's Symphony for Concert Band, and Roy Harris's Folksong Symphony and Symphony for Voices. Other important American symphonists are Aaron Copland, Virgil Thomson, Walter Piston, Roger Sessions, Henry Cowell, Randall Thompson, and Howard Hanson.

Bibliography

See R. Simpson, ed., The Symphony (2 vol., 1972); D. F. Tovey, Essays in Musical Analysis: Symphonies (1935, repr. 1972); R. Nadeau, The Symphony (rev. ed. 1974); H. Chappell, Sounds Magnificent (1986).


 

[SIHM-fuh-nee] A cross between Muscat of Alexandria (muscat) and Grenache Gris, Symphony was developed by the university of california, davis and introduced in 1981. Symphony has met with limited acceptance and is therefore planted in limited amounts. Symphony wines have a hint of spiciness and sometimes show apricot and peach characteristics. Château de Baun in sonoma is the best-known producer of a variety of Symphony wines-from dry to sweet and from still to sparkling. This winery's known for the musical names of their various Symphony wines such as Finale, Rhapsody Rosé, and Jazz.

 
Fine Arts Dictionary: symphony
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An extended musical composition for orchestra in several movements, typically four. Among the composers especially known for their symphonies are Ludwig van Beethoven, Johannes Brahms, Franz Josef Haydn, Gustav Mahler, and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

 
Music: Symphony
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A piece for large orchestra, usually in four movements.

 
Word Tutor: symphony
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A long musical work written for an orchestra. Also: A large orchestra.

pronunciation Beethoven's Fifth Symphony is the most sublime noise that has ever penetrated into the ear of Man. — E.M. Forster (1879-1970), English novelist.

 
Wikipedia: Symphony
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A symphony is a musical composition, often extended and usually for orchestra. "Symphony" does not imply a specific form. Many symphonies are tonal works in four movements with the first in sonata form, and this is often described by music theorists as the structure of a "classical" symphony, although many symphonies by the acknowledged classical masters of the form, Joseph Haydn, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven, do not conform to this model.

Contents

History of the form

Origins

The word "symphony" derives from Greek συμφωνία, meaning "agreement or concord of sound", "concert of vocal or instrumental music", from σύμφωνος, "harmonious" (Oxford English Dictionary). Isidore of Seville was the first to use the Latin word symphonia as the name of a two-headed drum, and from ca. 1155 to 1377 the French form symphonie was the name of the organistrum or hurdy-gurdy. In late medieval England, symphony was used in both of these senses, whereas by the sixteenth century it was equated with the dulcimer. In German, Symphonie was a generic term for spinets and virginals from the late 16th century to the 18th century (Marcuse 1975, 501). In the sense of "sounding together" the word begins to appear in the titles of some works by 16th- and 17th-century composers including Giovanni Gabrieli (Sacrae symphoniae, 1597, and Symphoniae sacrae, liber secundus, 1615), Adriano Banchieri (Eclesiastiche sinfonie, 1607), Lodovico Grossi da Viadana (Sinfonie musicali, 1610), and Heinrich Schütz (Symphoniae sacrae, 1629).

In the 17th century, for most of the Baroque period, the terms symphony and sinfonia were used for a range of different compositions, including instrumental pieces used in operas, sonatas and concertos—usually part of a larger work. The opera sinfonia, or Italian overture had, by the 18th century, a standard structure of three contrasting movements: fast; slow; fast and dance-like. It is this form that is often considered as the direct forerunner of the orchestral symphony. The terms "overture", "symphony" and "sinfonia" were widely regarded as interchangeable for much of the 18th century.[citation needed]

Another important progenitor of the symphony was the ripieno concerto—a relatively little-explored form resembling a concerto for strings and continuo, but with no solo instruments. The earliest known ripieno concerti are by Giuseppe Torelli (his set of six, opus five, 1698). Antonio Vivaldi also wrote works of this type.[citation needed] Perhaps the best known ripieno concerto is Johann Sebastian Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. 3.

18th-century symphony

Early symphonies, in common with both overtures and ripieno concertos, have three movements, in the tempi quick-slow-quick. However, unlike the ripieno concerto, which uses the usual ritornello form of the concerto, at least the first movement of these symphonies is in binary form. They are distinguishable from Italian overtures in that they were written to stand on their own in concert performances, rather than to introduce a stage work—although a piece originally written as an overture was sometimes later used as a symphony, and vice versa. The vast majority of these early symphonies are in a major key.[citation needed]

Symphonies at this time, whether for concert, opera, or church use, were not considered the major works on a program: often, as with concerti, they were divided up between other works, or drawn from suites or overtures. Vocal music was dominant, and symphonies provided preludes, interludes, and postludes. At the time most symphonies were relatively short, lasting between 10 and 20 minutes.[citation needed]

The "Italian" style of symphony, often used as overture and entr'acte in opera houses, became a standard three movement form: a fast movement, a slow movement, and then another fast movement. Mozart's early symphonies are in this layout. The early three-movement form was eventually replaced by a four-movement layout which was dominant in the latter part of the 18th century and most of the 19th century. This symphonic form was influenced by Germanic practice, and would come to be associated with the "classical style" of Haydn and Mozart. The important changes were the addition of a "dance" movement and the change in character of the first movement to becoming "first among equals."[citation needed]

The normal four-movement form became, then:

  1. an opening allegro
  2. a slow movement
  3. a minuet or scherzo
  4. an allegro or rondo

Variations on this layout were common, for instance the order of the middle two movements, or the addition of a slow introduction to the first movement. The first known symphony to introduce the minuet as the third movement is a work in D major of 1740 by Georg Matthias Monn, while the first composer to consistently add a minuet as part of a four-movement form was Johann Stamitz.[citation needed]

The composition of early symphonies was centred on Vienna and Mannheim. Early exponents of the form in Vienna included Georg Christoph Wagenseil, Wenzel Raimund Birck and Georg Monn, while the Mannheim school included Johann Stamitz. Symphonies were written throughout Europe, however, with examples by Giovanni Battista Sammartini, Andrea Luchesi and Antonio Brioschi from Italy, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach from northern Germany, Leopold Mozart from Salzburg, François-Joseph Gossec from Paris, and Johann Christian Bach and Carl Friedrich Abel from London.[citation needed]

Later significant Viennese composers of symphonies include Johann Baptist Vanhal, Karl Ditters von Dittersdorf and Leopold Hoffmann. The most important symphonists of the latter part of the 18th century are Joseph Haydn, who wrote at least 108 symphonies over the course of 36 years (Webster and Feder 2001), and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who wrote at least 56 symphonies in 24 years (Eisen and Sadie 2001).

19th-century symphony

With the rise of established professional orchestras, the symphony assumed a more prominent place in concert life between approximately 1790 and 1820. Ludwig van Beethoven's first Academy Concert advertised "Christ on the Mount of Olives" as the featured work, rather than his performances of two of his symphonies and a piano concerto.[citation needed]

Beethoven dramatically expanded the symphony. His Symphony No. 3 (the Eroica), has a scale and emotional range which sets it apart from earlier works. His Symphony No. 5 is arguably the most famous symphony ever written. His Symphony No. 9 takes the unprecedented step (for a symphony) of including parts for vocal soloists and choir in the last movement, making it a choral symphony (however, Daniel Steibelt had written a piano concerto with a choral finale four years earlier, in 1820). Hector Berlioz, who coined the term "choral symphony," built on this concept in his "dramatic symphony" Roméo et Juliette while explaining his intent in the five-paragraph introduction in that work's score (Berlioz 1857, 1). Beethoven and Franz Schubert replaced the usual genteel minuet with a livelier scherzo.[citation needed] In Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, a program work, the composer inserted a "storm" section before the final movement; Berlioz's Symphonie fantastique, also a programme work, has both a march and a waltz, and five movements instead of the customary four.

Robert Schumann and Felix Mendelssohn were two leading German composers whose symphonies added the expanded harmonic vocabulary of Romantic music. Some composers also wrote explicitly programmatic symphonies, such as the French Hector Berlioz and the Hungarian Franz Liszt. In Russia, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov followed their examples with two "symphonic suites", "Antar" and "Scheherazade". Johannes Brahms, who took Schumann and Mendelssohn as his point of departure, composed symphonies with very high levels of structural unity; other important symphonists of the late 19th century included Anton Bruckner, Antonín Dvořák and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.[citation needed]

By the end of the 19th century, some French organists named some of their organ compositions symphony: their instruments (many built by Aristide Cavaillé-Coll) allowed an orchestral approach. Charles-Marie Widor's and Louis Vierne's orchestral symphonies are heard much less often than their organ symphonies.[citation needed]

20th-century symphony

At the beginning of the 20th century, Gustav Mahler wrote long, large-scale symphonies (his eighth is nicknamed the "Symphony of a Thousand" because of the forces required to perform it). The twentieth century also saw further diversification in the style and content of works which composers labelled as "symphonies" (Anon. 2008). Some composers, including Dmitri Shostakovich, Sergei Rachmaninoff and Carl Nielsen, continued to write in the traditional four-movement form, while other composers took different approaches: Jean Sibelius' Symphony No. 7, his last, is in one movement, whereas Alan Hovhaness's Symphony No. 9, Saint Vartan (1949–50) is in twenty-four.

There remained, however, certain tendencies: symphonies were still, on the whole, orchestral works. Symphonies with vocal parts, or parts for solo instrumentalists, were the exception rather than the rule.[citation needed] Designating a work a "symphony" still implied a degree of sophistication, and seriousness of purpose. The word sinfonietta came into use to designate a work that was "lighter" than a symphony.

There have also been diversification in the size of orchestra required. While Mahler's symphonies call for extravagant resources, Arnold Schoenberg's Chamber Symphony No. 1 and John Coolidge Adams's Chamber Symphony are scored for chamber groups.

In the 20th and early 21st century symphonies have been written for Wind Ensemble and Band. In Europe one example is Paul Hindemith's Symphony in B-flat for band (1951).[original research?], whereas in America Alan Hovhaness's Symphonies Nos. 4, 7, 14, and 23 are examples of symphonic works for school and college wind bands.

Media

See also

Symphonies by number, name, and key
No. 0 | No. 1 | No. 2 | No. 3 | No. 4 | No. 5 | No. 6 | No. 7 | No. 8 | No. 9 | No. 10 | No. 11
No. 12 and higher: Haydn, Mozart, M.Haydn, Shostakovich, Hovhaness,...
List of symphonies by name - List of symphonies by key - List of symphony composers
See also: Sinfonia | Sinfonia concertante | Unfinished symphony | Curse of the Ninth

Sources

  • Anon. 2008. "Symphony." The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. rev., edited by Michael Kennedy, associate editor Joyce Bourne. Oxford Music Online (Accessed 24 July 2008) (Subscription access)
  • Berlioz, Hector. 1857. Roméo et Juliette: Sinfonie dramatique: avec choeurs, solos de chant et prologue en récitatif choral, op. 17. Partition de piano par Th. Ritter. Winterthur: J. Rieter-Biedermann.
  • Bukofzer, Manfred F. 1947. Music in the Baroque Era: From Monteverdi to Bach. New York: W. W. Norton.
  • Eisen, Cliff, and Stanley Sadie. 2001. "Mozart (3): (Johann Chrysostum) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. S. Sadie and J. Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.
  • Marcuse, Sybil. 1975. Musical Instruments: A Comprehensive Dictionary. Revised edition. The Norton Library. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-00758-8.
  • Newman, William S. 1972. The Sonata in the Baroque Era. New York: W. W. Norton.
  • Schubert, Giselher. 2001. "Hindemith, Paul." The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: MacMillan.
  • Tarr, Edward H. 1974. Unpaginated editorial notes to his edition of Giuseppe Torelli, Sinfonia a 4, G. 33, in C major. London: Musica Rara.
  • Webster, James, and Georg Feder. 2001. "Haydn, (Franz) Joseph". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. S. Sadie and J. Tyrrell. London: Macmillan.

External links


 
Translations: Symphony
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - symfoni

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    symfoniorkester

Nederlands (Dutch)
symfonie, harmonie

Français (French)
n. - symphonie

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    orchestre symphonique

Deutsch (German)
n. - Sinfonie, Sinfonieorchester

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    Sinfonieorchester

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (μουσ.) συμφωνία, (μτφ.) αρμονική σύνθεση

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    (μουσ.) συμφωνική ορχήστρα

Italiano (Italian)
sinfonia

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    orchestra sinfonica

Português (Portuguese)
n. - sinfonia (f)

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    orquestra sinfônica

Русский (Russian)
симфония

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    симфонический оркестр

Español (Spanish)
n. - sinfonía

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    orquesta sinfónica

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - symfoni

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
交响乐, 交响曲, 交响音乐会, 交响乐团, 交响乐队, 和声, 谐声

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    交响乐团

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 交響樂, 交響曲, 交響音樂會, 交響樂團, 交響樂隊, 和聲, 諧聲

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    交響樂團

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 교향곡, 심포니, 조화음

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 交響曲, シンフォニー, コンサート

idioms:

  • symphony orchestra    交響楽団

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) سيمفونيه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮סימפוניה‬


 
 

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