Concert overture by Samuel Barber
Overture to The School for Scandal , Op. 5, is a concert overture by Samuel Barber . It is Barber's first work for full orchestra, composed in 1931 while he was completing his studies at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.[ 1] The premiere was given on August 30, 1933 by the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Alexander Smallens .[ 2] It lasts around 8 min.[ 1]
The title refers to the comedy The School for Scandal written by Richard Brinsley Sheridan and the overture by Barber intended to reflect the spirit of the play.[ 1]
The instrumentation is as follows: piccolo , 2 flutes , 2 oboes , english horn , 2 clarinets , bass clarinet , 2 bassoons , 4 horns , 3 trumpets , 3 trombones , tuba , timpani , bass drum , cymbals , triangle , bells , celesta , harp and strings . It is characterized by orchestral brilliance and a number of shifts in tempo and dynamics.
The overture helped to establish Barber's national reputation and became in the 1950s a more regular part of the repertoire of American orchestras. It won the Joseph H. Bearns Prize of Columbia University in 1933.[ 3]
References
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