Misplaced Pages

Faust Overture

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Faust Overture is a concert overture by German composer Richard Wagner. Originally composed between 1839 and 1840, Wagner intended it to be the first movement of a Faust Symphony based on the Faust legend and play by German playwright Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Eventually, Wagner abandoned writing the planned symphony and composed instead a single-movement concert overture, incorporating ideas from the other sketched movements. He made a final revision to the score in 1855. The Faust Overture is one of the few compositions by Wagner which was written for the concert hall, rather than the theatre.

See also

References

External links

Works based on Faust
Folk legend
Seminal works
Prose
Plays
Operas
Ballets
Classical music
Other music
Albums
Songs
Films
Television
Episodes
Other
Musicals
Comics
Art
Richard Wagner
Complete operas
Early works
Romantic operas
Music dramas
Der Ring des Nibelungen
Non-operatic music
  • Symphony in C major (1832)
  • Polonia Overture (1836)
  • Das Liebesmahl der Apostel (1843)
  • Faust Overture (1840, rev. 1855)
  • Wesendonck Lieder (1858)
  • Siegfried Idyll (1870)
  • Kaisermarsch
  • Writings
    Other opera
    Opera excerpts
    Unfinished operas
    Inventions
    Bayreuth Festival
    Wagner family
    Cultural depictions
    Film adaptations
    Named for Wagner
    Related


    Stub icon

    This article about a classical composition is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Categories: