ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Camille Saint-Saëns (1835–1921) Work title: Symphony No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 78 ("Organ Symphony") Year of composition: 1886 Premiere: 19 May 1886, London Commissioned by: Royal Philharmonic Society Dedicated to: Franz Liszt Duration: approximately 35–40 minutes Instrumentation: Symphony orchestra, organ, and piano four hands ______________________________ Few nineteenth-century symphonies combine architectural discipline, orchestral brilliance, and emotional impact as successfully as Camille Saint-Saëns' Symphony No. 3 in C Minor, Op. 78 , universally known as the "Organ Symphony." Completed in 1886, the work belongs to the composer's mature years and stands as the culmination of his contribution to the symphonic tradition. By this stage Saint-Saëns had already established himself as one of Europe's most admired musicians: a virtuoso pianist, a celebrated organist, a respected conductor, and a composer of extraordin...
The Vienna apartment where Schubert lived and worked during his final years, sharing the space with the poet Mayrhofer. Franz Schubert was the twelfth of fourteen children in a schoolmaster’s household. His life was brief, financially unstable, and largely unrecognized by the broader public during his lifetime. Yet within a small circle of devoted friends, he composed with extraordinary constancy, reshaping the German Lied and expanding the expressive horizon of chamber and symphonic music. 1797 Born in Vienna. 1808 Admitted to the Imperial Chapel Choir and enrolled at the Stadtkonvikt, where he received formal musical training and encountered the symphonic tradition. 1812 Studies composition with Antonio Salieri, acquiring disciplined theoretical grounding. 1813 His voice breaks, and he leaves the Imperial School. Assists his father as a teacher while composing his First Symphony. 1814 Composes Gretchen am Spinnrade , a work widely regarded as a turning point in the evolut...