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Print this page The Largest Instrument, the Orchestra
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The orchestra is a large and very complicated instrument which has grown since Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos. Beethoven and Wagner enlarged the orchestra and Mahler in his Symphony No. 8 pushed the boundaries even further. At the same time, instruments changed and the saxophone was added. The conductor became a necessity, becoming the one who plays this enormous instrument. Orchestras may have titles such as ‘Symphonic’, ‘Philharmonic’, ‘String’, ‘Youth’ and are also employed for ballet and opera. Symphonies, Concertos, Overtures and Tone Poems are the banquet this course provides.
COURSE OUTLINE
- History of the orchestra; Parts of the orchestra; Instruments
- Concertos – Guitar, Violin, Cello, Horn, Clarinet
- Symphonies – Mozart, Beethoven, Berlioz. Brahms, Mahler
- Shostakovich, Tchaikovsky, Goreki
- Overtures – Rossini, Offenbach, Brahms
- Tone Poems – Copland, Borodin, Strauss, Gershwin, Debussy
LEARNING OUTCOMES
By the end of this course, students should be able to:
- Have a knowledge of the parts of the orchestra and the role of the conductor
- Know the function of tone poems.
- Be aware of the different solo instruments in concertos
- Name three overtures
Virginia McGill
BMus (Hons), PhD
Dr Virginia McGill, B.Mus (Hons), PhD, studied music at UNSW. The subject of her doctorate was opera but her musical interests are very broad. Her teaching experience is considerable. Virginia has...