I've never heard any of Brahms' symphonies referred to as "the Bells". However, Rachmaninoff did compose a choral symphony called "The Bells". Perhaps that is what you are thinking of.
The "Surprise" Symphony. Haydn was by all reports a playful man. He inserted an extraordinarily loud and sudden chord close to the beginning of the second movement. Haydn's idea was to "surprise them", that is, those who would have had supposedly "dozed off" during the playing of his symphony.
The Pastoral symphony is Beethoven's sixth symphony.
Beethoven's last symphony was his Symphony no. 9 in d minor (Op. 125), known as the "Choral" Symphony. However, the final--and most famous--movement of this work is known as the "Ode to Joy."
Beethoven's last symphony was his Symphony no. 9 in d minor (Op. 125), known as the "Choral" Symphony. However, the final--and most famous--movement of this work is known as the "Ode to Joy."
Gustav Mahler's 2nd Symphony is also called known as the Resurrection Symphony.
Gustav Mahler's second symphony is also known as "The Resurrection".
The ninth symphony by Antonín Dvořák is also known as the "New World Symphony." This nickname was given to the symphony because Dvořák composed it during his time living in America and was inspired by the landscapes and cultures he encountered there.
Franz Joseph Hayden.
Brahms symphony no. 1, composed by Dvorak, is considered Beethoven's 10th. Beethoven's 10th doesn't ACTUALLY exist. This is just what the people labeled the symphony, as it sounds like something Beethoven would have composed.
chitra
The Symphony No. 3 in E flat major Op. 55 known as the Eroica
Mahlers First Symphony is known as "The Titan". It's not a song though. Could this be it?