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Symphony No. 6 (Dvorak) |
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Symphony No. 6 (Dvorak)The Symphony No. 6 in D major, opus 60, was composed by Antonin Dvorak in 1880, and first published as no. 1.It is dedicated to the German conductor Hans Richter, who requested Dvorak compose a symphony for the Vienna Philharmonic (although they never performed it under Richter). Its first performance was given in Prague in 1881, with performances the following year in Leipzig and London. The symphony is in four movements: The first movement shows the influence of Brahms's own symphony in D major, and features lyrical writing for the strings and woodwind with grandioso contributions from the brass. The slow second movement continues the pastoral mood, in a style which demonstrates Dvorak's reverence of Beethoven. The Scherzo is reminiscent of his Slavonic Dances, and the symphony was so well received at its first performance that this movement was repeated as an encore. Rarely performed compared with Dvorak's later symphonies (particularly the ninth), his sixth deserves to be better known as a fine example of Dvorak's nationalistic expression.
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