Symphony in B-flat for Band (Hindemith)

Symphony in B for Band was written by Paul Hindemith, an influential German composer known for writing music in a variety of genres, including orchestral, opera, chamber, ballet, vocal and many more. The piece was completed in 1951 and premiered on April 5 of that year by the U.S. Army Band "Pershing's Own" with the composer conducting (Miles, et al. 2010, 953).

Instrumentation

The Symphony in B is scored for:

Woodwinds

Brass

Percussion

Each instrument plays an integral role in the musical progression of the symphony.

Critical reception

Richard Franko Goldman, a bandmaster himself and a music critic of the mid-20th century, called the piece "singularly dead" (Goldman 1958, 128). He states that composing for band is difficult because "the agglomeration of instruments is irrational and exasperating" (Goldman 1958, 127).

He previously lamented that the piece falls "between the effort to be popular and obvious, and the intention to remain unsmiling and uncorrupted" (Goldman 1958, 127).

Performances

References

External links

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