Don Juan (Strauss)

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Don Juan, op.20 is a tone poem for large orchestra by the German composer Richard Strauss, which was written in 1888. The composer conducted its premier on November 11, 1889 with the orchestra of the Weimar Opera, where he served as Court Kapellmeister.

Strauss wrote and conducted the piece when he was only twenty-four years old and it became an international success shortly after its debut. It marks the discovery of the composer's formal style and tonal language. The work is based on the poem Don Juan by Nikolaus Lenau, from which much of the musical work's passion is drawn. According to the composer, who wrote two days after the first performance "Well then – Don Juan had a great success, it sounded wonderful and went very well. It unleashed a storm of applause rather unusual for Weimar".

An average performance takes around sixteen minutes.

[edit] Orchestration

This composition is scored for a large-sized romantic orchestra. Strauss calls for the following:

Woodwinds
3 Flutes (Fl. 3 doubling Piccolo)
2 Oboes
English Horn
2 Clarinets in A
2 Bassoons
Contrabassoon
Brass
4 Horns in E
3 Trumpets in E
3 Trombones
Tuba
Percussion
3 Timpani
Triangle
Cymbals
Glockenspiel
Strings
Harp
Violins I, II
Violas
Violoncellos
Double basses

An orchestral score and a score for piano four hands was published by J. Aibl in Leipzig in 1890.

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