Thursday, February 9, 2012

Romeo=horn, Juliet = flute - Day 40





This coming Valentine's day concert will feature Romeo and Juliet Overture Fantasy by Petor Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Love Music from "Boris Godunow"by Modeste Moussorgsky, Danse Bacchanale from "Samson and Delilah" by Camille Saint-Saens, and this romantic evening will end with Suite from Carmen by George Bizet. for more event info...


Now, I have to say I love wikipedia, especially on Valentine's Day searches.  Here's a brief wikipedia description of Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet - 


The love theme signifies the couple first meeting and the scene at Juliet's balcony. The English horn represents Romeo, while the flutes represent Juliet. Then the battling strand returns, this time with more intensity and build-up, with the Friar Laurence Theme heard with agitation. The strings enter with a lush, hovering melody over which the flute and oboe eventually soar with the love theme once again, this time loud and in D major, signaling the development section and their consummated marriage, and finally heard in E major, and two large orchestra hits with cymbal crashes signal the suicide of the two lovers. A final battle theme is played, then a soft, slow dirge in B major ensues, with timpani playing a repeated triplet pattern, and tuba holding a B natural for 16 bars. The woodwinds play a sweet homage to the lovers, and a final allusion to the love theme brings in the climax, beginning with a huge crescendo B natural roll of the timpani, and the orchestra plays homophonic shouts of a B major chord before the final bar, with full orchestra belting out a powerful B natural to close the overture.


365 Days Around Florence is a blog written by the Florence Convention and Visitors Bureau. At the Visitor Center near the Florence Civic Center, we spend a great deal of our time in letting guests know how much is happening in Florence. We decided to share (blog-style) 365 days' worth of things to do. Find more things to do at www.visitflo.com/regional_calendar/ ... and enjoy!

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