This is a list of symphonies in C major written by notable composers.
Composer | Symphony |
---|---|
Carl Friedrich Abel | Symphony, Op. 10/4 |
Kurt Atterberg | Symphony No. 6, Op. 31 (1927-28) |
Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach | Symphony BR C10 \ (Wf I: 6) |
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach |
|
Mily Balakirev | Symphony No. 1 (1864-97) |
Woldemar Bargiel | Symphony, Op. 30 (by 1861) |
Arnold Bax | Symphony No. 2 (1924-6) |
Ludwig van Beethoven | Symphony No. 1, Op. 21 (1800) |
Victor Bendix | Symphony No. 1, Op. 16 (by 1882) |
Franz Berwald | Symphony No. 3, "Singulière" |
Georges Bizet |
|
Luigi Boccherini |
|
William Boyce | Symphony in C major, Op. 2/3 |
Joly Braga Santos | Symphony No. 3 in C major (1949) |
Havergal Brian |
|
John Alden Carpenter | Symphony[1] |
Alfredo Casella | Symphony No. 3, Op. 63 (1939-40) |
George Whitefield Chadwick | Symphony No. 1[2] |
Felix Draeseke | Symphony No. 3 Tragica, Op. 40 (1885-6) |
Paul Dukas | Symphony in C (1896) |
Georges Enescu | Symphony No. 3, Op. 21 (1916-18) |
Robert Fuchs | Symphony No. 1, Op. 37 (1884) |
Florian Leopold Gassmann | Symphonies Hill 21, 23, 43, 86. Also, a symphony in C major that might be by Aumon[3] instead.[4] |
Anatoly Luppov | Symphony No.1 in C major (1964)[5] |
William Gilchrist | Symphony No. 1[6] |
Asger Hamerik | Symphony No. 4 "Majestic" Op. 35 (premiered 1889, Baltimore)[7] |
Joseph Haydn |
|
Michael Haydn |
|
Aram Khachaturian | Symphony No. 3 (Symphony-Poem) (1947) |
Joseph Martin Kraus |
|
Adolf Fredrik Lindblad | Symphony No. 1, Op. 19 (1831) |
Borys Lyatoshynsky | Symphony No. 5, Op. 67 (1965-6) |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart |
|
Nikolai Myaskovsky |
|
Ludolf Nielsen | Symphony No. 3, Op. 22 (1914) |
Hans Pfitzner | Symphony No. 3, Op. 46 (1940) |
Gavriil Popov | Chamber Symphony, previously known as Septet (1927) |
Sergei Prokofiev |
|
Joachim Raff | Symphony No. 2, Op. 140 (1866) |
Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov | Symphony No. 3, Op. 32, 1866-1873 (1st version), 1886 (2nd version) |
Jean Rivier | Symphony No. 2 for Strings (1937) |
Guy Ropartz | Symphony No. 4 in C major (1914) |
Anton Rubinstein | Symphony No. 2 Ocean, Op. 42 (original version of 1851-revisions to 1863)[8] |
Franz Schmidt | Symphony No. 4 (1932-33) |
Franz Schubert | |
Robert Schumann | Symphony No. 2, Op. 61 (1846) |
Vissarion Shebalin | Symphony No. 5, Op. 56 (1962) |
Dmitri Shostakovich | Symphony No. 7, Op. 60 "Leningrad" (1942) |
Jean Sibelius |
|
Igor Stravinsky | Symphony in C (1940) |
Louis Spohr | Symphony No. 7 |
Richard Wagner | Symphony in C major (1832) |
Carl Maria von Weber |
|
Mieczysław Weinberg | Symphony No. 7, Op. 81 (1964) |
Notes
- ↑ Goetschius (1929), p. 376
- ↑ Goetschius (1929), p. 362
- ↑ Aumon -- Léopold Aimon??
- ↑ Hill (1981), pp. xxvii - xxxv
- ↑ https://www.historiadelasinfonia.es/naciones/la-sinfonia-en-rusia/otros-compositores-2a-parte/luppov/
- ↑ Goetschius (1929), p. 361
- ↑ 1889 Musical Yearbook
- ↑ "Dialogues and Extensions". Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2009.
References
See also
For symphonies in other keys, see List of symphonies by key.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.