The Vltava River, transformed by Smetana into one of the most celebrated musical portraits of a homeland in Romantic music. ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Bedřich Smetana Work Title: Vltava (The Moldau) Year of Composition: 1874 First Performance: April 4, 1875, Prague Form: Symphonic Poem Duration: Approximately 11–13 minutes Instrumentation: Symphony Orchestra _______________________________ There are works that depict a landscape. There are works that tell a story. And there are works that transform an entire homeland into music. Vltava —known internationally as The Moldau —belongs unmistakably to this last category. Composed in 1874 as the second symphonic poem of Smetana's monumental cycle Má vlast (My Homeland) , the work traces the course of the Vltava River from its springs in the Bohemian mountains to its majestic arrival in Prague. Yet the composition is far more than a musical description of nature. The river becomes a symbol of Bohemia itself, a living th...
The young Carl Maria von Weber developing the musical language that would help bridge Classicism and German Romanticism. ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Carl Maria von Weber Title: Symphony No. 1 in C Major, J. 50 Composition Date: 1806–1807 Premiere: 1807 Genre: Symphony Duration: Approximately 25–28 minutes Instrumentation: Orchestra (pairs of woodwinds, horns, trumpets, timpani, and strings) __________________________ When the name Carl Maria von Weber is mentioned, most listeners immediately think of Der Freischütz , the opera that established him as one of the founding figures of German Romanticism. Long before achieving fame on the operatic stage, however, Weber was already exploring the possibilities of large-scale instrumental forms and developing many of the ideas that would later define his mature style. His Symphony No. 1 in C Major , completed in 1807 when he was only twenty years old, stands at a fascinating crossroads in music history. It belongs to a peri...