Dvořák, Antonín: Serenade for winds, op.44 (with score)
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 Published On Feb 10, 2020

This performance is by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra.

Timestamps:
I. Moderato, quasi marcia: 0:00
II. Minuetto. Tempo di minuetto: 4:17
III. Andante con moto: 10:34
IV. Finale. Allegro molto: 19:42

From Wikipedia:
Serenade for wind instruments, cello and double bass in D minor, Op. 44, B. 77, is a chamber composition by the Czech composer Antonín Dvořák. The work is dedicated to the music critic and composer Louis Ehlert who praised the Slavonic Dances highly in the German press.

It was created in 1878, shortly after the première of the opera The Cunning Peasant, one of fifteen compositions he submitted for the Austrian State Stipendium award. The work was first heard on 17 November 1878 at a concert exclusively dedicated to Dvořák's works, with the orchestra of the Prague Provisional Theatre (Czech: Prozatímní). The composition was performed under the composer's baton.

The Serenade evokes the old-world atmosphere of musical performances on the castles of the Rococo period, where the worlds of the aristocracy and the common folk merged. It is composed in a 'Slavonic' style (shortly before the Slavonic Dances), though not quoting folksong directly; and the middle part of the second movement contains rhythms reminiscent of the furiant dance.

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