Memorial Hall Library

Eine Alpensinfonie, op. 64 = An alpine symphony = La symphonie alpestre, Strauss

Label
Eine Alpensinfonie, op. 64 = An alpine symphony = La symphonie alpestre, Strauss
resource.accompanyingMatter
historical informationtechnical information on music
Form of composition
symphonic poems
Format of music
not applicable
Main title
Eine Alpensinfonie
Music parts
not applicable
Oclc number
42533192
Responsibility statement
Strauss
Series statement
Telarc classics
Sub title
op. 64 = An alpine symphony = La symphonie alpestre
Summary
Strauss wrote his Alpine Symphony for relaxation, in the odd moments between work on operatic projects. Although the first sketches date from 1911, the work's inspiration is traced to a boyhood holiday of mountain-climbing and to the spectacular view of alpine peaks visible from his Bavarian villa at Garmisch. Composition proceeded slowly over several years, which was unusual for a Strauss composition. He was in that period at work with librettist Hugo von Hofmannsthal on a new opera, Die Frau ohne Schatten ("The Woman Without a Shadow"), but World War I was beginning and Hofmannsthal was drafted into the Austrian intelligence service; suddenly he had much less time for literary work. Strauss, frustrated by the inaccessibility of his collaborator and in need of some project to absorb his energies, turned to the sketches of the Alpine Symphony, completing the composition and orchestrating it in a hundred-day burst of activity in the winter of 1914-1915.--Page 4 of program notes
Transposition and arrangement
not applicable
resource.variantTitle
Alpine symphonySymphonie alpestre
Classification
resource.conductor
resource.instrumentalist
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