Radetzky March
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Radetzky March is also a book by Joseph Roth.
Radetzky March, Op. 228 is a march composed by Johann Strauss Sr. in 1848. It was dedicated to Austrian Field Marshal Joseph Radetzky von Radetz, and became quite a popular march among soldiers.
When it was first played, in front of Austrian officers in attendance, they promptly clapped and stomped their feet when the chorus was played. This tradition is carried over today when the march is played in classical music venues in Vienna, among members of the audience who are familiar with the tradition. It is almost always played as the last piece of music at the Neujahrskonzert, the Vienna New Year Concert.
Despite its military nature, its tone is rather festive than martial. It is usually played in under three minutes.
Radetzky March consists of three main parts:
- The introduction: The whole orchestra plays here and the brass section plays the melody.
- The first figure: This is played by the string section.
- At figure two, the whole orchestra plays until figure three when it repeats back to the D.S. (first figure.)
- The trio: This is played by the brass section and the trumpet plays three triplets in the last bars of the trio.
- Figure five: The whole orchestra plays here.
- Figure six: The whole orchestra plays here and then repeats back to figure 5.
- The orchestra plays on the last bar.
- They go back to the D.C. (beginning).
- They play until figure three; and the piece finishes with the Fine ("end") bar -- i.e., the direction is Da capo al fine (repeat from beginning up to the word fine).
[edit] External links
- Radetzkymarsch (mp3pro, 1,24 MB). [1] Liedertafel.
- Alter Tanz aus Wien, a Radetzkymarsch trio adaptation (sheet music)