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Tragic Overture

Composer: Brahms Johannes

Instruments: Orchestra

Tags: Overture

#Parts
#Arrangements

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Complete Score PDF 14 MBComplete Score (monochrome) PDF 7 MBColor Cover PDF 0 MB
Complete Score (scan) PDF 5 MBComplete Score (Medium Quality) PDF 2 MB
Complete Score PDF 6 MB

Parts for:

Flute
AllViolinViolaTubaTrumpetTromboneTimpaniPiccoloOboeFrench hornFluteClarinetCelloBassoonAlto saxophone

Arrangements:

Other

Piano (Robert Keller) Piano four hands (Unknown) Piano(2) (Robert Keller) Piano four hands (Johannes Brahms)
Wikipedia
The Tragic Overture (German: Tragische Ouvertüre), Op. 81, is a concert overture for orchestra written by Johannes Brahms during the summer of 1880. It premiered, under Hans Richter, on 26 December 1880 in Vienna. Eight days later, it was repeated at the University of Breslau on a program with the premiere of the Academic Festival Overture. Most performances last between twelve and fifteen minutes.
Brahms chose the title "tragic" to emphasize the turbulent, tormented character of the piece, in essence a free-standing symphonic movement, in contrast to the mirthful ebullience of a companion piece he wrote the same year, the Academic Festival Overture. Despite its name, the Tragic Overture does not follow any specific dramatic program. Brahms summed up the effective difference in character between the two overtures when he declared "one laughs while the other cries."
The Tragic Overture comprises three main sections, all in the key of D minor.
Theorists have disagreed in analyzing the form of the piece: Jackson finds Webster's multifarious description rather obscurist and prefers to label the work's form as a "reversed sonata design" in which the second group is recapitulated before the first, with Beethoven's Coriolan Overture as a possible formal model.
The work is scored for piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, and strings.