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Haydn Symphonies
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The Symphony No. 44 in E minor by Joseph Haydn was written sometime around 1770. It has the nickname Trauer (Mourning) apparently because late in life Haydn asked for its slow movement to be played at his funeral.

The piece is typical of Haydn's Sturm und Drang (storm and stress) period. The first movement, which is in sonata form, begins with a four-note motif played in unison which occurs throughout the movement. The second movement, unusually, is a minuet in E minor and trio in E major (this movement would normally come third). The minuet is in the form of a canon between the upper and lower strings.

The third movement is slow, also in E major, and with strings muted. The finale, like the first movement, is in sonata form and is dominated by a figure which opens the movement in unison. It is quite contrapuntal, and ends in E minor rather than finishing in a major key as was usual in most other minor key works of the time.

Symphony No. 45, known as the Farewell (German: Abschieds-Symphonie) was written in 1772. It is in the key of F-sharp minor, and is one of Haydn's better-known works from this period.

The piece is written for two oboes, a bassoon, two horns, and strings (violins divided into two, violas, cellos and double basses). As is usual for symphonies, it is in four movements.

It was written for Haydn's patron, Prince Nikolaus Esterházy, while he, Haydn and the court orchestra were at the Prince's summer palace in Eszterhaza. The stay there had been longer than expected, and most of the musicians had been forced to leave their wives back at home in Eisenstadt, so in the last movement of the symphony, Haydn subtly hinted to his patron that perhaps he might like to allow the musicians to return home: during the final adagio each musician stops playing, snuffs out the candle on his music stand, and leaves in turn, so that at the end, there are just two muted violins left (played by Haydn himself and the concertmaster, Alois Luigi Tomasini). Esterházy apparently got the message: the court returned to Eisenstadt the day following the performance.
Tracks
NoDescending order NameAscending orderDescending order   LengthAscending orderDescending order SizeAscending orderDescending order PriceAscending orderDescending order Demo  
1 01 - Symphony No 44 _Trauer_ Allegro con brio   10min, 0sec 40.80 MB (flac format) $1.24
2 02 - Symphony No 44 _Trauer_ Menuetto, Allegretto   5min, 25sec 19.94 MB (flac format) $1.24
3 03 - Symphony No 44 _Trauer_ Adagio   7min, 32sec 22.11 MB (flac format) $1.24
4 04 - Symphony No 44 _Trauer_ Finale. Presto   4min, 51sec 20.49 MB (flac format) $1.24
5 05 - Symphony No 45 _Abschied_ 1. Allegro assai   6min, 56sec 31.97 MB (flac format) $1.24
6 06 - Symphony No 45 _Abschied_ 2. Adagio   7min, 7sec 23.80 MB (flac format) $1.24
7 07 - Symphony No 45 _Abschied_ 3. Munet. Allegretto   3min, 36sec 14.35 MB (flac format) $1.24
8 08 - Symphony No 45 _Abschied_ Finale. Presto   7min, 23sec 28.12 MB (flac format) $1.24
9 09 - Symphony No 49 _La Passione_ Adagio   7min, 31sec 28.04 MB (flac format) $1.24
10 10 - Symphony No 49 _La Passione_ Allegro di molto   4min, 20sec 19.68 MB (flac format) $1.24
11 11 - Symphony No 49 _La Passione_ Menuet   4min, 9sec 17.92 MB (flac format) $1.24
12 12 - Symphony No 49 _La Passione_ Finale. Presto   3min, 5sec 13.47 MB (flac format) $1.24
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