Czech Suite (Dvořák)
Appearance
(Redirected from B. 93)
The Czech Suite in D major (Czech: Česká suita D dur), Op. 39 (B. 93), was composed by Antonín Dvořák in 1879 and published later in his life. Adolf Čech conducted the premiere.[1]
Dvořák had only recently become introduced to Fritz Simrock by Johannes Brahms but had already become displeased with several of his new publisher's business practices, including releasing older works with high opus numbers, implying they were new. He offered this work, recently written, to Simrock with a somewhat earlier number (that of works he'd written a few years before) as part of his response.[1]
The suite consists of five movements as follows:
- Preludium (Pastorale): Allegro moderato (D major)
- Polka: Allegretto grazioso (D minor)
- Sousedská (Minuetto): Allegro giusto (B♭ major)
- Romance: Andante con moto (G major)
- Finale (Furiant): Presto (D minor)
References
[edit]- ^ a b Roger Dettmer. Czech Suite at AllMusic
External links
[edit]- Work details antonin-dvorak.cz (in English)
- Czech Suite: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
- Animated score on YouTube, NDR Sinfonieorchester, John Eliot Gardiner