Symphony cantata
Symphony cantata is a term for musical works that combine the form of the symphony with the cantata ( solo and / or choral singing ), especially in romantic music .
Well-known examples of symphony cantatas are:
- Ludwig van Beethoven : 9th Symphony with the final chorus An die Freude
- Hector Berlioz : Roméo et Juliette
- Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy : Song of Praise
- Franz Liszt : Dante Symphony and Faust Symphony
- Asger Hamerik : 7th Symphony
- Jean Louis Nicodé : The Sea op. 31, Gloria! op. 34
- Gustav Mahler : 2nd , 3rd , 4th and 8th symphonies and Das Lied von der Erde
- Max Reger: The 100th Psalm in four movements that correspond to the movements of a symphony
- Dmitri Shostakovich : 2nd (“To October”) , 3rd (“To May 1st”) , 13th (“Babi Yar”) and 14th symphony
- Alexander Scriabin : 1st Symphony
- Robert Strassburg (1915-2003): Leaves of Grass: A Choral Symphony (1992)
- Igor Stravinsky : Psalm Symphony
- Ralph Vaughan Williams : A Sea Symphony