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List of program music
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==List of program music by composer== {{inc-musong|date=October 2021}} === {{ill|Edmund Angerer|de}} === * ''[[Toy Symphony]]'' === [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] === * [[Capriccio sopra la lontananza del suo fratello dilettissimo|Capriccio for keyboard in B♭]] "On the departure of a beloved brother" BWV 992 * [[St Matthew Passion]] BWV 244 * Many of Bach's [[cantata]]s contain elements that could be considered programmatic === [[P. D. Q. Bach]] === * [[1712 Overture and Other Musical Assaults|1712 Overture]] === [[Les Baxter]] === * [[Ritual of the Savage]] (1951) * The Passions: featuring Bas Sheva (1954) === [[Ludwig van Beethoven]] === * [[Coriolan Overture]], Op. 62 (1807); based on the story of [[Coriolanus]] * [[Symphony No. 6 (Beethoven)|Symphony No. 6]], ''Pastoral'', Op. 68 (1808); features titled movements, country dances, bird calls, and a storm. * Leonore No. 3 Overture, Op. 72b (1806); one of a series of overtures composed for the opera ''Leonore'', later renamed ''[[Fidelio]]''. Leonore No. 3 is well known for portraying some of the major events of the plot in a condensed, purely orchestral form, most notably the distant trumpet fanfares of the finale. Next to the actual, finalized ''Fidelio'' overture, this is the most commonly performed version, and still sometimes replaces the ''Fidelio'' overture in some productions. * [[Egmont (Beethoven)|Egmont Overture]], Op. 84 * ''[[Wellington's Victory]]'', Op. 91 is also known as the ''Battle Symphony'' and describes the battle between the French and British armies outside the Spanish town of [[Vitoria, Spain|Vitoria]] and the subsequent British victory. The work features rifles and cannons as instruments. It also makes use of ''[[Rule Britannia]]'', which is used to describe the British, whereas the French side is announced by the French song ''Marlbrouk s'en va-t-en guerre''. * [[Piano Sonata No. 12 (Beethoven)|Piano Sonata in A flat Op. 26]] (3rd movement subtitled "Death of a hero", 4th movement manifestly "Life goes on" in intent) * [[Piano Sonata No. 17 (Beethoven)|Piano Sonata in D minor Op. 31 Nr. 2]] ("Der Sturm", inspired by [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s ''[[The Tempest (play)|The Tempest]]'') * [[Piano Sonata No. 26 (Beethoven)|Piano Sonata in E-flat major Op. 81a "Les Adieux"]] === [[Hector Berlioz]] === * ''[[Symphonie Fantastique]]'', (1830) * [[Harold en Italie|''Harold in Italy'']], based on ''Childe Harold's Pilgrimage'' by [[Lord Byron]], (1834) * [[Roméo et Juliette (Berlioz)|''Romeo et Juliette'']], symphonie dramatique <!-- [[Johannes Brahms]] --> === [[Benjamin Britten]] === * ''[[Four Sea Interludes]]'', (1945) — Britten extracted four of the six interludes from his opera ''[[Peter Grimes]]'' for performance as a stand-alone orchestral piece. "I. Dawn," "II. Sunday Morning" (describing a seaside community gathering to worship), "III. Moonlight," and "IV. Storm" were all meant to describe these scenes and images through Britten's music literally.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.kennedy-center.org/artist/composition/3178 |title = Four Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes, Op. 33a}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.laphil.com/philpedia/music/four-sea-interludes-benjamin-britten |title=Four Sea Interludes {{!}} LA Phil |website=www.laphil.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120716072049/http://www.laphil.com/philpedia/music/four-sea-interludes-benjamin-britten |archive-date=2012-07-16}} </ref> === [[Anton Bruckner]] === * [[Symphony No. 4 (Bruckner)|Symphony No. 4 in E-flat major, "Romantic"]] — The program, involving medieval castles and dawn and royal hunts, appears to have been an afterthought like it was with the other Symphonies, but the validity of it, in this case, is supported by the subtitle given to the work, the only one of Bruckner's Symphonies to have been given a subtitle by the composer himself. ===[[Michael Colgrass]]=== * ''[[Winds of Nagual]]'' ===[[Aaron Copland]]=== * ''[[Appalachian Spring]]'' * [[Billy the Kid (ballet)|''Billy the Kid'']] * ''[[Lincoln Portrait]]'' * [[Rodeo (Copland)|''Rodeo'']] ===[[Claude Debussy]]=== Debussy wrote more or less entirely in the 'program' style; see [[List of compositions by Claude Debussy]] ===[[Paul Dukas]]=== * [[The Sorcerer's Apprentice (Dukas)|''The Sorcerer's Apprentice'']] ===[[Antonín Dvořák]]=== * [[Symphony No. 9 (Dvořák)|Symphony No. 9, ''From the New World'']], which is associated with [[The Song of Hiawatha]] and describes the composer's impressions of America. * ''[[The Water Goblin]]'' * ''[[The Noon Witch]]'' * ''[[A Hero's Song]]'' * Four Overtures: ** [[Hussite Overture]] **''[[In Nature's Realm (Dvořák)|In Nature's Realm]]'' **[[Carnival Overture (Dvořák)|''Carnival'']] **[[Othello (Dvořák)|''Othello'']] ===[[Edward Elgar]]=== Many of Elgar's works are associated with favourite places, mostly in Herefordshire and Worcestershire where he lived, and his MSS are often noted as such * [[Enigma Variations|''Variations on an Original Theme (Enigma)'']], Op. 36, a series of musical portraits of the composer's friends (and in one case their dog as well), and incidents associated with them. In addition a secret underlying "Enigma" theme runs through the whole work, which has never been definitely discovered * ''[[Sea Pictures]]'' * [[Cockaigne (In London Town)|Overture ''Cockaigne (In London Town)'']], Op. 40 * ''[[The Wand of Youth]]'', Opp. 1a and 1b, two suites based on music he had written as a child * [[In the South (Alassio)|Overture ''In the South (Alassio)'']], Op. 50 * [[Falstaff (Elgar)|''Falstaff'']], symphonic study, Op. 68 * [[The Severn Suite]], Op. 85, for brass band * [[Nursery Suite]] ===[[Duke Ellington]]=== * ''[[Harlem Air Shaft]]''<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Green |first1=Edward |title="Harlem Air Shaft": A True Programmatic Composition? |journal=Journal of Jazz Studies |date=2011 |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=28–46 |doi=10.14713/jjs.v7i1.9 |doi-access=free }}</ref> ===[[Alexander Glazunov]]=== Alexander Konstantinovich Glazunov was a prolific composer of symphonic poems, independent overtures and fantasias, who often drew his inspiration from history. * ''To the Memory of a Hero'', elegy for orchestra, Op. 8 * ''[[Stenka Razin]]'', Op. 13 * ''The Forest'', fantasy for orchestra, Op. 19 * ''Slavonian Feast'', symphonic sketches, Op. 26A * ''The Sea'', fantasy for orchestra, Op. 28 * ''Oriental Rhapsody'', Op. 29 * ''The Kremlin'', symphonic picture in three parts, Op. 30 * ''The Spring'', symphonic picture, Op. 34 * ''Carnaval'', overture for large orchestra and organ, Op. 45 * ''From Dark into Light'', fantasy for orchestra, Op. 53 * ''Solemn Overture'', Op. 73 * ''From the Middle Ages'', suite for orchestra, Op. 79 * ''The Song of Destiny'', dramatic overture, Op. 84 * ''Russian Fantasy'' for balalaika-orchestra, Op. 86 * ''To the Memory of Gogol'', symphonic prologue, Op. 87 * ''Finnish Fantasy'' for orchestra, Op. 88 * ''Finnish Sketches'' for orchestra, Op. 89 * ''Karelian Legend'', Op. 99 * ''Poème épique'', Op. posth. === [[George Gershwin]] === * ''[[An American in Paris]]'' * ''[[Cuban Overture]]'' === [[Edvard Grieg]] === * ''[[Peer Gynt (Grieg)|Peer Gynt]]'', originally a selection from incidental music and a song for the play [[Peer Gynt]] by [[Henrik Ibsen]], but now is almost always played by itself. * ''[[Lyric Pieces]]'' * ''[[Wedding Day at Troldhaugen]]'' === [[Ferde Grofé]] === * ''[[Grand Canyon Suite]]'', (1931). Named sections illustrate "Sunrise," "The Painted Desert," "On the Trail," "Sunset" and "Cloudburst." "On the Trail" is the familiar section with a mule's braying and hoofbeats. "Cloudburst," another musical storm, was described by [[Arturo Toscanini|Toscanini]] as "vivid and terrifying." === [[Robin Holloway]] === * ''Domination of Black op.23'', for orchestra after a poem of [[Wallace Stevens]] * ''Europa & the Bull op.121'', for solo tuba and orchestra after [[Ovid]] * ''Phaeton's Journey: Son of the Sun op.131'', for solo trumpet and orchestra after [[Ovid]] === [[Alan Hovhaness]] === * ''Storm on Mount Wildcat'' * ''Sosi – Forest of Prophetic Sounds'' * ''Vision from High Rock'' * [[Symphony No. 2 (Hovhaness)|''Mysterious Mountain'']] (Symphony No.2) * ''Macedonian Mountain Dance'' * ''Fantasy on Japanese Wood Prints'' * ''[[And God Created Great Whales]]'' (orchestra with humpbacked whale songs) * ''Vishnu Symphony'' (Symphony No.19) * ''Majnun Symphony'' (Symphony No.24) * ''Odysseus Symphony'' (Symphony No.25) * [[Symphony No. 50 (Hovhaness)|''Mount St. Helens Symphony'']] (Symphony No.50) === [[Augusta Holmès]] === * ''Irlande'' * ''Pologne'' === [[Charles Ives]] === * ''The Celestial Railroad'' * ''[[Central Park in the Dark]]'' * ''[[String Quartet No. 2 (Ives)|String Quartet No. 2]]'' ("Discussions", "Arguments", and "The Call of the Mountains") * ''[[A Symphony: New England Holidays]]'' * ''[[Three Places in New England]]'' * ''[[The Unanswered Question]]'' * ''Yale-Princeton Football Game'' === [[Leoš Janáček]] === * ''[[Taras Bulba (rhapsody)|Taras Bulba]]'', rhapsody for orchestra based on the novella by [[Nikolai Gogol]] === [[Albert Ketèlbey]] === Most of the better-known compositions of Ketèlbey are strongly programmatic, including: * ''[[In a Monastery Garden]]'' * ''[[In a Persian Market]]'' * ''[[In the Mystic Land of Egypt]]'' * ''Bells across the Meadows'' * ''With Honour Crowned'' === [[Franz Liszt]] === Liszt is considered the inventor of the symphonic poem and his programmatic orchestral works set the framework for several composers of the romantic era. He composed a total of thirteen symphonic poems as well as two programmatic symphonies, drawing his inspiration from a variety of literary, mythological, historical and artistic sources. * ''[[Ce qu'on entend sur la montagne]]'' (What is heard on the mountain), after a poem by [[Victor Hugo]] * ''[[Tasso, Lamento e Trionfo (Liszt)|Tasso, Lamento e Trionfo]]'', based on stories by [[George Gordon, Lord Byron|Byron]] and [[Goethe]] on the life of the poet [[Torquato Tasso]] * ''[[Les Préludes (Liszt)|Les Préludes]]'', based on [[Lamartine]] * ''[[Orpheus (Liszt)|Orpheus]]'' * ''[[Prometheus (Liszt)|Prometheus]]'' * ''[[Mazeppa (Liszt Symphonic Poem)|Mazeppa]]'', based on Hugo and Byron * ''[[Festklänge (Liszt)|Festklänge]]'' (''Festival Sounds'') * ''[[Héroïde funèbre (Liszt)|Héroïde funèbre]]'' * ''[[From the Cradle to the Grave (Liszt)|From the Cradle to the Grave]]'' * ''[[Hungaria (Liszt)|Hungaria]]'' * ''[[Hamlet (Liszt)|Hamlet]]'', based on the play by [[Shakespeare]] * ''[[Hunnenschlacht (Liszt)|Hunnenschlacht]]'' (Battle of the Huns), based on a monumental [[fresco]] by painter [[Wilhelm von Kaulbach]] depicting the battle between Emperor [[Theoderic]] and [[Attila the Hun]] in 451 * ''[[Die Ideale (Liszt)|Die Ideale]]'' based on a work by [[Friedrich von Schiller]] * ''[[Faust Symphony]]'', after the epic work by Goethe * ''[[Dante Symphony]]'', after [[Dante]]'s [[Divine Comedy]] === [[Frederik Magle]] === * [[The Hope (Magle)|''The Hope'']] (2001), depicting the [[battle of Copenhagen (1801)|battle of Copenhagen]] === [[Gustav Mahler]] === Much of Mahler's early work was designed programmatically. However, he made serious efforts to downplay the programmatic reputation of many of these pieces later in his life, including removing some of the programmatic titles from his symphonies. * [[Symphony No. 1 (Mahler)|Symphony No. 1]], ''Titan'', (1888) * [[Symphony No. 2 (Mahler)|Symphony No. 2]], ''Resurrection'', (1894) * [[Symphony No. 3 (Mahler)|Symphony No. 3]], (1896) * ''[[Das Lied von der Erde]]'' === [[Felix Mendelssohn]] === * ''[[Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage (Mendelssohn)|Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage]]'' * ''[[The Hebrides (overture)|The Hebrides]]'' === [[Olivier Messiaen]] === * [[La Nativité du Seigneur|''La Nativite du Seigneur'']] (The Nativity of Our Lord), strongly programmatic series of organ pieces * [[Des canyons aux étoiles...|''Des Canyons au Etoiles'']] ("From the Canyons to the Stars"), on the natural beauty of the United States * ''[[Catalogue d'oiseaux]]'' ("Catalog of Birds") * ''[[Oiseaux exotiques]]'' === [[Modest Mussorgsky]] === * ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]''; movements represent a series of paintings and the promenade of a viewer around the gallery * ''[[Night on Bald Mountain]]'' === [[Carl Nielsen]] === * [[Helios Overture]], Op. 17 === [[Maurice Ravel]] === * ''[[Daphnis et Chloé]]'' * ''[[La Valse]]'' * ''[[Jeux d'eau]]'' * ''[[Miroirs]]'' suite * ''[[Gaspard de la nuit]]'' * ''[[Ma mère l'oye]]'' * ''[[Pavane pour une infante défunte]]'' === [[Ottorino Respighi]] === * [[Pines of Rome|''I pini di Roma'' ("The Pines of Rome")]], 1923–1924 * [[Church Windows|''Vetrate di Chiesa'' ("Church Windows")]], 1926 * [[The Birds (Respighi)|''Gli Uccelli'' ("The Birds")]], 1927 * [[Fountains of Rome|''Le fontane di Roma'' ("The Fountains of Rome")]], 1915–1916 * [[Feste Romane|''Feste Romane'' ("Roman Festivals")]], 1928 === [[Terry Riley]] === * ''[[Chanting the Light of Foresight]]'', with [[Rova Saxophone Quartet]] === [[Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov]] === * [[Scheherazade (Rimsky-Korsakov)|''Scheherazade'']], Op. 35, (1888). Symphonic suite after the “Thousand and One Nights”. Section titles such as "The Sea and Sinbad's Ship," "Festival in Baghdad." * [[Antar (Rimsky-Korsakov)|Antar]] - symphony No. 2, later published as a symphonic suite. * [[Sadko]], Op. 5 - described as a Musical Picture * [[Night on Mt Triglav]] - extracted from the opera “Mlada” * [[Skazka]] - “Fairy Tale” inspired by Pushkin. * [[The Snow Maiden]] - suite from the opera “Snegurochka” * [[Christmas Eve]] - suite from the opera * [[The Invisible City of Kitezh]] - suite from the opera * [[The Golden Cockerel]] - suite from the opera Plus many other works inspired by myths and fairy tales === [[Gioachino Rossini]] === * ''[[William Tell Overture]]'' === [[Camille Saint-Saëns]] === * ''[[Phaéton (Saint-Saëns)|Phaéton]]'', Op. 39 * ''[[Danse Macabre (Saint-Saëns)|Danse Macabre]]'', Op. 40 (1874) * ''[[The Carnival of the Animals]]'', (1886) === [[Arnold Schoenberg]] === * ''[[Verklärte Nacht]]'', Op. 4 ("Transfigured Night"), 1899 Romantic musical portrait of a moonlight forest walk, from [[Richard Dehmel]]'s poem === [[Peter Seabourne]] === * ''Symphony of Roses'', for orchestra after poems by [[W. B. Yeats]] and a painting by [[Jack Yeats]] * ''Tu Sospiri?'', for orchestra related to [[Nancy Storace]] and [[Mozart]] * ''The Darkness of Ages'', tone poem for orchestra inspired by a description of a well by [[Leos Janacek]] * ''My River'', septet based on a poem of [[Emily Dickinson]] === [[Jean Sibelius]] === Sibelius composed several tone poems throughout his career, often making use of stories and motifs from the [[Finland|Finnish]] national epic, the [[Kalevala]]. Early in his career he also wrote works on national and historical subjects. * ''[[Finlandia (symphonic poem)|Finlandia]]'' * ''[[Kullervo (Sibelius)|Kullervo]]'', Op. 7, symphonic poem based on the story of [[Kullervo]] in [[Finnish mythology]] * ''[[En saga]]'', Op. 9 * ''[[Karelia Suite]]'', Op. 11 * ''[[Lemminkäinen Suite|Lemminkäinen Legends]]'', Op. 22, four symphonic poems based on the story of [[Lemminkäinen]] in the [[Kalevala]] * ''[[The Dryad (Sibelius)|The Dryad]]'', Op. 45 No. 1 * ''[[Pohjola's Daughter]]'', Op. 49, tone poem based on a story from the [[Kalevala]] * ''[[Nightride and Sunrise]]'', Op. 55 * ''[[The Bard (Sibelius)|The Bard]]'', Op. 64 * ''[[Luonnotar]]'', Op. 70 * ''[[The Oceanides]]'', Op.73 * ''[[Tapiola (Sibelius)|Tapiola]]'', Op. 112 === [[Bedřich Smetana]] === * ''[[Má vlast]]'', 1874–1879 * [[String Quartet No. 1 (Smetana)|String Quartet No. 1, ''From my life'']] === [[William Grant Still]] === * [[Symphony No. 1 "Afro-American"]] * Symphony No. 2 in G minor, "Song of a New Race" === [[Richard Strauss]] === A major developer of the [[tone poem]] as a musical form, Strauss displayed outstanding skill at musical description. He claimed that he was capable of "describing a knife and fork<!-- isn't the quote "a teaspoon"? -->" in music, and said that a sensitive listener to ''Don Juan'' could discern the hair color of Don Juan's amorous partners. * ''[[Don Juan (Strauss)|Don Juan]]'', Op. 20 (1889) * [[Macbeth (Strauss)|''Macbeth'']], Op. 23 * ''[[Tod und Verklärung]]'' ("Death and Transfiguration") Op. 24 (1889) * ''[[Till Eulenspiegels lustige Streiche]]'' ("Till Eulenspiegel's merry pranks"), Op. 28 * ''[[Also sprach Zarathustra (Strauss)|Also Sprach Zarathustra]]'' ("[[Thus Spoke Zarathustra]]"), Op. 30 (1896) * ''[[Don Quixote (Strauss)|Don Quixote]]'', Op. 35 (1897) * ''[[Ein Heldenleben]]'' ("A hero's life"), Op. 40 * ''[[Symphonia Domestica]]'' ("Domestic Symphony"), Op. 53 (1903). A musical description of the composer's personal daily life, including an unflattering musical picture of Frau Strauss * ''[[Eine Alpensinfonie]]'' ("An Alpine Symphony"), Op. 64 (1915). A work with twenty-two named narrative sections describing the ascent of an alpine mountain. A section of the work depicts a thunderstorm, with perhaps the most realistic thunder-and-lightning in orchestral music. * Duett-Concertino (1947), depicting a princess and a bear. === [[Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky]] === * [[Romeo and Juliet (Tchaikovsky)|''Romeo and Juliet'']] Fantasy Overture (1869; revised 1870, 1880) * [[The Tempest (Tchaikovsky)|''The Tempest'']] Symphonic Fantasia after Shakespeare, Op. 18 (1873) * [[Hamlet (Tchaikovsky)|''Hamlet'']] Overture-Fantasia, Op. 67a (1888) **The above three works are based on plays by [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]] * [[Francesca da Rimini (Tchaikovsky)|''Francesca da Rimini'']], Op. 32 (1876) is based on [[Dante]]'s ''Inferno''. * [[Manfred Symphony|''Manfred'']] Symphony in four scenes after the dramatic poem by [[Byron]], Op. 58 * The [[1812 Overture]] (1882) famously uses different themes to represent the [[France|French]] and [[Russia]]n armies in the [[Napoleonic Wars]], and concludes with the firing of cannons and the ringing of the church bells. === [[Nobuo Uematsu]] === * [[Final Fantasy]] Many different themes over the video game series representing different characters and situations === [[Richard Wagner]] === * ''[[Siegfried Idyll]]'' === [[Vaughan Williams|Ralph Vaughan Williams]] === * ''[[The Lark Ascending]]'' * ''[[Sinfonia Antartica]]'' About the explorer Captain Scott's doomed expedition to the south pole, arranged from his film score
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