Composers

Serenade for Strings

Composer: Tchaikovsky Pyotr Ilyich

Instruments: String ensemble

Tags: Serenade

#Parts
#Arrangements

Download free scores:

Complete Score PDF 4 MB
Complete Score PDF 1 MB
Complete Score PDF 13 MBComplete Score (reprint) PDF 12 MB
Complete Score PDF 0 MB
Complete Score PDF 18 MB

Parts for:

AllViolinViolaCello

Arrangements:

Other

Pezzo in forma di Sonatina (No.1). Piano (Lippold, Max)Valse (No.2). Piano + Violin (Leopold Auer)Complete. Saxophone(7) (Larocque, Jacques)Complete. Piano four hands (Unknown)Valse (No.2). Piano (Theodor Kirchner)Complete. Piano(2) (Langer, Eduard)Valse (No.2). Piano (Georgy Catoire)Valse (No.2). Viol(6) (Jacobs, Paul)Elegia (No.3). Piano (Theodor Kirchner)Valse (No.2). Piano (Henryk Pachulski)Elegia (No.3). Organ (Silver, Alfred Jethro)Valse (No.2). Bass accordion + Accordion(3) (De Bra, Paul)Elegia (No.3). Piano + Violin (Richard Hofmann)
Wikipedia
Tchaikovsky's Serenade for Strings in C major, Op. 48, was composed in 1880.
Serenade for Strings has 4 movements:
Tchaikovsky intended the first movement to be an imitation of Mozart's style, and it was based on the form of the classical sonatina, with a slow introduction. The stirring 36-bar Andante introduction is marked "sempre marcatissimo" and littered with double-stopping in the violins and violas, forming towering chordal structures. This introduction is restated at the end of the movement, and then reappears, transformed, in the coda of the fourth movement, tying the entire work together.
On the second page of the score, Tchaikovsky wrote, "The larger number of players in the string orchestra, the more this shall be in accordance with the author's wishes."
The second movement, Valse, has become a popular piece in its own right.
The Serenade was given a private performance at the Moscow Conservatory on 3 December 1880. Its first public performance was in St Petersburg on 30 October 1881 under Eduard Napravnik.