E-flat major

E major
Relative key C minor
Parallel key E minor
Dominant key B major
Subdominant A major
Component pitches
E, F, G, A, B, C, D, E

The E (E-flat) major scale consists of the pitches E, F, G, A, B, C, and D. Its key signature has three flats: B, E, A.

Its relative minor is C minor, and its parallel minor is E minor.

E-flat major is often associated with bold, heroic music, in part because of Beethoven's usage. His Eroica Symphony, Emperor Concerto and Grand Sonata are all in this key. Also Beethoven's (hypothetical) 10th symphony is in the key of E-flat major. But even before Beethoven, Francesco Galeazzi identified E-flat major as "a heroic key, extremely majestic, grave and serious: in all these features it is superior to that of C."[1]

Thus, three of Mozart's completed horn concerti and Joseph Haydn's famous Trumpet Concerto are in E-flat major, and so is Anton Bruckner's Fourth Symphony with its prominent horn theme in the first movement. Another famous heroic piece in the key of E-flat major is Richard Strauss's A Hero's Life. The heroic theme from the Jupiter movement of Holst's The Planets is in E-flat major. Mahler's vast and heroic Eighth Symphony is in E-flat, and his Second Symphony also ends in the key.

Ascending and descending E-flat major scale
Ascending and descending scale in E-flat major

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This is not to say that in the Classical period E-flat major was only for bombastic music with brass. "E-flat was the key [Joseph] Haydn chose most often for [string] quartets, ten times in all, and in every other case he wrote the slow movement in the dominant, B-flat."[2] Or "when composing church music and operatic music in Eflat major, [Joseph] Haydn often substituted cors anglais for oboes in this period," and also in the Symphony No. 22 in E-flat major.[3]

For Mozart, E-flat major was associated with Freemasonry, "E-flat evoked stateliness and an almost religious character."[4]

Well-known compositions in this key

Notes

  1. Francesco Galeazzi, Elementi teorico-practici di musica (1796) as translated to English in Rita Steblin, A History of Key Characteristics in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries. University of Rochester Press (1996): 111
  2. Paul Griffiths, The String Quartet. New York: Thames & Hudson (1983): 29
  3. David Wyn Jones, "The Symphonies of Haydn" in A Guide to the Symphony, ed. Robert Layton. Oxford: Oxford University Press
  4. Robert Harris, What to Listen for in Mozart. Simon & Schuster (2002): 174

External links

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