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Nicknamed 'The Emperor' for its nobility and grandeur, Beethoven's
Piano Concerto No.5 in E flat, Op.73 was the composer's last piano concerto.
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In these masterpieces Bach abandoned the standard type of concerto grosso in favour of a variety of solo combinations, resulting in music of intense, appealing originality, complex textures and development, and unprecedented instrumentation.
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Long one of the most beloved concertos in the violin repertoire, Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto in E Minor features important formal innovations that place it on a par with the most significant works in the genre, including the violin concertos of Beethoven and Brahms.
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This edition contains Mozart's last two symphonies, representing the pinnacle of Mozart's genius as an orchestral composer.
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This work appears in full score with original instrumentation and bar numbered movements.
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Dedicated to the memory of Franz Liszt, Saint-Saens' Symphony No.3 'Organ' Op.78 in D minor is one of the most important works in French symphonic music.
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A great and lasting favourite in the vast symphonic literature, Dvorak's
New World Symphony is among the composer's most enduring and appealing works ever since its premiere in 1893.
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Completed in 1824, three years before the composer's death, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony occupies a special place at the summit of Classical literature- the peak of Beethoven's orchestral output and, for generations of composers, the supreme model of extended symphonic form.
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One of the last composers of the great Romantic tradtion, Mahler possessed a strong sense of the dramatic in life, he chose to record that drama in nine magnificent symphonies, all works of vivid orchestration, innovative symphonic structure, and rich emotional expression.
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The four orchestral suites of J.S. Bach, are superb examples of the composer's innovative mastery of the many dance forms popular in the courts of the 18th century.
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