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The Toy Symphony (original titles: Berchtoldsgaden Musick or Sinphonia Berchtolgadensis) is a symphony in C major dating from the 1760s with parts for toy instruments, including toy trumpet, ratchet, bird calls (cuckoo, nightingale and quail), chime tree, triangle, drum and glockenspiel.
Arguably Beethoven achieved the highest elaboration of this technique; the famous "fate motif" —the pattern of three short notes followed by one long one—that opens his Fifth Symphony and reappears throughout the work in surprising and refreshing permutations is a classic example.
From 1929 to 1939, the Walt Disney Company produced 75 original animated short features under the Silly Symphony line. These shorts were originally designed as whimsical one-shots without ongoing characters; later such stars as Bucky Bug, the Big Bad Wolf, Max Hare, and Toby Tortoise were introduced, either as recurring figures or as characters who were expanded upon later in Disney comics.
This would then allow academics to begin to search for patterns in Beethoven's compositional method. [13] For decades scholars believed that all the surviving sketches and drafts for the Eroica Symphony were transcribed in the Eroica sketchbook. However, in 1962 the Wielhorsky sketchbook was found to also contain sketches from the Eroica ...
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Symphony (1949–50) Johann Baptist Wanhal: Symphony, Bryan E1 [33] *Symphony, Bryan E2 [34] Symphony, Bryan E3 [35] Symphony, Bryan E4 [36] [37] Symphony, Bryan E5 [38] Václav JindÅ™ich Veit: Symphony, Opus 49 [39] Richard Wagner: Symphony in E major (two movements sketched but abandoned in 1834, completed by Felix Mottl in 1887) Karl Weigl
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