< Symphony | CatalogsRevision as of 11:03, 28 April 2010 by imported>Ro Thorpe
The metadata subpage is missing. You can start it via filling in this form or by following the instructions that come up after clicking on the [show] link to the right.
|
Do you see this on PREVIEW? then SAVE! before following a link.
A - For a New Cluster use the following directions
Subpages format requires a metadata page.
Using the following instructions will complete the process of creating this article's subpages.
- Click the blue "metadata template" link below to create the page.
- On the edit page that appears paste in the article's title across from "
pagename = ".
- You might also fill out the checklist part of the form. Ignore the rest.
- For background, see Using the Subpages template Don't worry--you'll get the hang of it right away.
- Remember to hit Save!
the "metadata template".
However, you can create articles without subpages. Just delete the {{subpages}} template from the top of this page and this prompt will disappear. :) Don't feel obligated to use subpages, it's more important that you write sentences, which you can always do without writing fancy code.
|
B - For a Cluster Move use the following directions
The metadata template should be moved to the new name as the first step. Please revert this move and start by using the Move Cluster link at the top left of the talk page.
The name prior to this move can be found at the following link.
|
|
This is a list of composers of symphonies. In most cases, the traditional number of numbered symphonies is given, regardless of exactitude.
18th century
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, 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