Symphony/Catalogs/Symphonic Composers: Difference between revisions
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*[[Edward Elgar]] (England), two symphonies, 1908 and 1911 (in 1998 a third was elaborated by [[Anthony Payne]] from sketches) | *[[Edward Elgar]] (England), two symphonies, 1908 and 1911 (in 1998 a third was elaborated by [[Anthony Payne]] from sketches) | ||
*[[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] (England), nine symphonies, 1909-1957 | *[[Ralph Vaughan Williams]] (England), nine symphonies, 1909-1957 | ||
*[[Arnold Bax]] (England), seven symphonies 1922-1939 | *[[Arnold Bax]] (England), seven symphonies, 1922-1939 | ||
*[[Richard Strauss]] (Germany), two symphonies | *[[Richard Strauss]] (Germany), two symphonies | ||
*[[Sergei Prokofiev]] (Russia), seven symphonies, 1917-1952 | *[[Sergei Prokofiev]] (Russia), seven symphonies, 1917-1952 | ||
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*[[Krzysztof Penderecki]] (Poland), eight symphonies, 1973-present | *[[Krzysztof Penderecki]] (Poland), eight symphonies, 1973-present | ||
*[[Philip Glass]] (America), eight symphonies | *[[Philip Glass]] (America), eight symphonies | ||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 18:17, 12 December 2012
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This is a list of composers of symphonies. In most cases, the traditional number of numbered symphonies is given, regardless of exactitude.
18th century
- Joseph Haydn (Austria), 104 symphonies
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Austria), 41 symphonies
19th century
- Ludwig van Beethoven (Germany), nine symphonies
- Franz Berwald (Sweden), four symphonies
- Franz Schubert (Austria), nine symphonies
- Hector Berlioz (France), two symphonies
- Felix Mendelssohn (Germany), five symphonies
- Robert Schumann (Germany), four symphonies
- Franz Liszt (Hungary), two symphonies
- César Franck (France), one symphony
- Anton Bruckner (Austria), nine symphonies, plus a Symphony No. 0
- Johannes Brahms (Germany), four symphonies
- Alexander Borodin (Russia), three symphonies
- Camille Saint-Saëns (France), three symphonies
- Mily Balakirev (Russia), two symphonies
- Georges Bizet (France), one symphony
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (Russia), six symphonies
- Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov (Russia), three symphonies
- Antonin Dvořák (Czechoslovakia), nine symphonies
20th century
- Gustav Mahler (Austria), eleven symphonies,[1] 1884-1909
- Alexander Glazunov (Russia), nine symphonies, 1884-1910
- Carl Nielsen (Denmark), six symphonies, 1894-1925
- Sergei Rachmaninov (Russia), three symphonies 1896-1936
- Hugo Alfven (Sweden), five symphonies, 1897-1942
- Jean Sibelius (Finland), seven symphonies, 1898-1924
- Alexander Scriabin (Russia), five symphonies (or 'poems')
- Charles Ives (America), four symphones, 1902-1916
- Igor Stravinsky (Russia), four symphonies, 1907-1945
- Karol Szymanowski (Poland), four symphonies
- Edward Elgar (England), two symphonies, 1908 and 1911 (in 1998 a third was elaborated by Anthony Payne from sketches)
- Ralph Vaughan Williams (England), nine symphonies, 1909-1957
- Arnold Bax (England), seven symphonies, 1922-1939
- Richard Strauss (Germany), two symphonies
- Sergei Prokofiev (Russia), seven symphonies, 1917-1952
- Dmitri Shostakovich (Russia), fifteen symphonies, 1925-1971
- Darius Milhaud (France), twelve symphonies
- Olivier Messiaen (France), one symphony
- Hans Werner Henze (Germany and Italy), ten symphonies, 1947-2000
- Alfred Schnittke (Russia), eight symphonies, 1972-1994
- Krzysztof Penderecki (Poland), eight symphonies, 1973-present
- Philip Glass (America), eight symphonies
References
- ↑ Including Das Lied von der Erde, the song cycle that Mahler regarded as a symphony