This is a list of symphonies in E-flat major written by notable composers.
Composer | Symphony |
---|---|
Carl Friedrich Abel |
|
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach | |
Johann Christian Bach | Symphony, Op. 6 No. 2 |
Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach |
|
Carlos Baguer | At least three symphonies, Nos. 12, 13 and 15 (by 1808, composer's death) |
Béla Bartók | Symphony (1902, unfinished) |
Arnold Bax | Symphony No. 4 in E-flat (1931, Parlett No. 307) [8] |
Franz Ignaz Beck | Symphony No. 4 (Op. 3, Callen 16) |
Ludwig van Beethoven |
|
Jiří Antonín Benda | Symphony "No. 6" (by c.1760) |
William Sterndale Bennett | Symphony No. 1 (1832) [9] |
Franz Berwald | Symphony No. 4 "Naïve" (1845) [10] |
Luigi Boccherini | Symphony in E-flat major, Op. 21/2, G. 494 (1775) Symphony No. 2 in E-flat major, Op. 12/2, G. 504 (1771) [11] Symphony No. 8 in E-flat major, Op. 35/2, G. 510 (1782) [11] Symphony No. 11 in E-flat major, Op. 35/5, G. 513 (1787) [11] |
Alexander Borodin | Symphony No. 1 (1862-7) |
Sergei Bortkiewicz | Symphony No. 2, Op. 55 (1947) |
Johann Evangelist Brandl | Symphony, Op. 12 (1792) |
Havergal Brian |
|
Antonio Brioschi | Three sinfonie: w/o opus (1735), Op. 5 and Op. 6 (1740s) |
Max Bruch | Symphony No. 1 , Op. 28 (first performed in 1868) [14] |
Anton Bruckner | Symphony No. 4 "Romantic" (1874) |
Fritz Brun | Symphony No. 5 (1929) |
Antonio Casimir Cartellieri |
|
Christian Cannabich |
|
Wojciech Dankowski | Symphony (around 1788) |
Franz Danzi | Symphony, P.219 (before 1826) |
Félicien-César David | Symphony (1846) |
Georg Druschetzky | Symphony in E-flat major [15] |
Franz Xaver Dussek | Symphony (before c.1778) |
Antonín Dvořák | Symphony No. 3, Op. 10, B. 34 (1873) |
Anton Eberl | Symphony Op. 33 (1803) |
Joachim Nicolas Eggert | Symphony (1807) |
Edward Elgar | Symphony No. 2, Op. 63 (1909–11) |
George Enescu | Symphony No. 1 (1905) |
Frederic Ernest Fesca | Symphony No. 1, Op. 6 (1812) [16] |
François-Joseph Fétis | Symphony No. 1 (1862) |
Zdeněk Fibich | Symphony No. 2 , Op. 38 (1893) |
Anton Fils | Symphony (by 1760) [17] |
Robert Fuchs | Symphony No. 2, Op. 45 |
Jan Adam Gallina | Symphony (before 1773) |
John Gardner | Symphony No. 2 (1984–85) |
Friedrich Gernsheim | Symphony No. 2, Op. 46 (1882) |
Georg Gerson | Symphony (1813) |
Alexander Glazunov | Symphony No. 4, Op. 48 (1893) Symphony No. 8, Op. 83 (1905) |
Reinhold Glière | Symphony No. 1, Op. 8 (1899–1900) |
Karl Goldmark | Symphony No. 2, Op. 35 (1887) [18] |
Charles Gounod | Symphony No. 2 (1855) |
Johann Gottlieb Graun | Symphony in E-flat major, GraunWV A:XII:13 [19] |
Adalbert Gyrowetz (Vojtěch Jírovec) | At least 3 symphonies, Opp. 6/2, 8 ("Great") and 18 (1780s-90s?) |
Johannes Haarklou | Symphony No. 4 (1920–22) |
Jacob Adolf Hägg | Symphony No. 1 "Nordic" (1871/1899) |
Joseph Haydn | Symphony No. 11 in E-flat major Symphony No. 22 in E-flat major, Philosopher (1764) Symphony No. 36 in E-flat major (composed by 1769) Symphony No. 55 in E-flat major, Schoolmaster (1774) Symphony No. 74 in E-flat major (1780 or 1781) Symphony No. 76 in E-flat major (1782?) Symphony No. 84 in E-flat major, In Nomine Domini (1786) Symphony No. 91 in E-flat major (1788) Symphony No. 99 in E-flat major (1793) Symphony No. 103 in E-flat major, Drumroll (1795) |
Michael Haydn | Symphony No. 1D, MH 35 (1760) Symphony No. 26, MH 340, Perger 17 (1783) Symphony No. 34, MH 473, Perger 26 (1788) |
Alfred Hill | Symphony No. 12 (1959) [9] |
Paul Hindemith | Symphony in E-flat (1940) |
Ernst Theodor Amadeus Hoffmann | Symphony in E flat major (1804) |
Ignaz Holzbauer | Symphony Op. 3 No. 1 [20] Symphony Op. 4 No. 3 [21] |
Jānis Ivanovs | Symphony No. 20 (1981) [22] |
Jan Kalivoda | Symphony No. 2, Op. 17 (1829) |
Edvin Kallstenius | Symphony No. 1 , Op. 16 (Sinfonia concentrata) (1926) [23] |
Jan Bedřich Kittl | Symphony No. 2 (?) (composer's dates 1806–68) |
Joseph Martin Kraus | Symphony in E-flat, VB 144 (1783) [24] |
Franz Krommer | Symphony No. 5, Op. 105 (published 1815) |
Joseph Küffner | Symphony No. 5, Op. 142 [25] |
Franz Lachner | Symphony No. 1, Op. 32 (1828) [26] |
Sylvio Lazzari | Symphony (1907) |
Simon Le Duc | Symphony "No. 3" (1777) |
Ruben Liljefors | Symphony, Op. 14 (1906) [27] |
Leevi Madetoja | Symphony No. 2, Op. 35 (1918) [28] |
Gustav Mahler | Symphony No. 8 "Symphony of a Thousand" (1906) |
John Marsh | Symphony No. 5 (12) (1783) [29] |
George W. H. Marshall Hall | Symphony No. 2 (1903) [30] |
Jāzeps Medinš | Symphony No. 3 (1941) |
Ernest John Moeran | Symphony No. 2 (sketched between 1939 and 1950, completed by Martin Yates in 2011) |
Georg Matthias Monn | Symphony (by 1750) |
Francisco Javier Moreno | Symphony (ca.1800) |
Alexander Moyzes | Symphony No. 4, Op. 38 (1947/1957) [31] |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Symphony No. 1, K. 16 (1764) Symphony No. 3, K. 18 (1764) Symphony No. 19 in E-flat major, K. 132 (1772) Symphony No. 26 in E-flat major, K. 184 (1773) Symphony No. 39, K. 543 (1788) |
Nikolai Myaskovsky | Symphony No. 19 for wind band, Op. 46 (1939) |
Josef Netzer | Symphony No. 4 (c. 1849) |
Ludvig Norman | Symphony No. 2, Op. 40 [32] |
Per August Ölander | Symphony (c.1868) |
Carlo d'Ordoñez | Symphonies "Brown Eb1", "Brown Eb2", "Brown Eb3", "Brown Eb4", "Brown Eb5" |
Boris Parsadanian | Symphony No. 2, Op. 6 "Martyros Sarian" (1961) [33] |
Václav Pichl |
|
Ignaz Pleyel | Symphony, Ben.134 |
Cipriani Potter | Symphony No. 8 (1828) [9] |
Anton Reicha | Symphony, Op. 41 (about 1800) [34] |
Prince Heinrich XXIV Reuss of Köstritz | Symphony No. 6 (pub. 1909) |
Ferdinand Ries | Symphony No. 3 , Op. 90 (1813) [35] Symphony "No. 8" , WoO 30 (1822) [35] |
Bernhard Romberg | Symphony No. 2, Op. 28 |
Antonio Rosetti | Nine Symphonies, Murray cat. A23 - A31 incl. (dates between 1773 - 1789) (Attribution of A25 and A31 questioned) |
Johann Rufinatscha | Symphony No. 2 (1840) |
Giovanni Battista Sammartini | Symphony, J-C 26 |
Camille Saint-Saëns | Symphony No. 1, Op. 2 (1853) |
Theodor von Schacht | Symphony (1790s) Symphony "Echo" (1790s) |
Franz Schmidt | Symphony No. 2 (1911–13) |
Joseph Schmidt | Symphony (pub. 1797) [composer died 1791] |
Robert Schumann | Symphony No. 3, Op. 97 "Rhenish" (1850) |
Johanna Senfter | Symphony No. 6 (?mid-1900s) |
Giovanni Sgambati | Symphony No. 2 (1884) [36] |
Dmitri Shostakovich | Symphony No. 3, Op. 20 "First of May" (1931) Symphony No. 9, Op. 70 (1945) |
Jean Sibelius | Symphony No. 5, Op. 82 (1915, rev 1916–9) |
Christian Sinding | Symphony No. 4 (1935–36) [37] |
Louis Spohr | Symphony No. 1, Op. 20 (1811) [38] Symphony No. 10, Op. posth. (1857) [39] |
Carl Stamitz | Symphony, Op. 9 No. 6 [40] |
Johann Stamitz | Symphony, Op. 11 No. 3 (1754-5) |
Charles Villiers Stanford | Symphony No. 6 , Op. 94 "In honour of the life-work of a great artist: George Frederick Watts" (1905) |
Igor Stravinsky | Symphony in E-flat, Op. 1 (1907) |
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky | Symphony in E-flat (1889–92) (reconstruction of the composer's intentions — the first movement became the third piano concerto, two other movements became an Andante and Finale for the concerto later arranged by Sergei Taneyev) |
Friedrich-Eugen Thurner | Symphony |
Anton Urspruch | Symphony, Op. 14 (1881) |
Jan Nepomuk Vent | Symphony (by 1800) |
Johann Baptist Wanhal | Symphony (Bryan Eb1, with La Tempesta finale) [41] |
Felix Weingartner | Symphony No. 2, Op. 29 (1900) [42] |
Samuel Wesley | Symphony (1784) [43] |
Christian Wilhelm Westerhoff | Symphony (1796) |
Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse | Symphony No. 5, DF 121 (1796, rev. 1838) [44] Symphony No. 7, DF 123 (1799) [44] |
Johann Wilhelm Wilms | Symphony No. 3, Op. 14 (by 1809) |
Ernst Wilhelm Wolf | Symphony (date unknown) [45] |
Francesco Zappa | Two symphonies (c.1770s) |
Niccolò Zingarelli | Symphony "No. 2" (before 1800) |
Bernard Zweers | Symphony No. 2 (1882–83) [46] |
Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf was an Austrian composer, violinist, and silvologist. He was a friend of both Haydn and Mozart. His best-known works include the German Singspiele Doktor und Apotheker and a number of programmatic symphonies based on Ovid's Metamorphoses.
Johann Wilhelm Hertel was a German composer, harpsichord and violin player.
Andreas Jakob Romberg was a German violinist and composer.
Franz Ignaz Beck was a German violinist, composer, conductor and music teacher who spent the greater part of his life in France, where he became director of the Grand Théâtre de Bordeaux. Possibly the most talented pupil of Johann Stamitz, Beck is an important representative of the second generation of the so-called Mannheim school. His fame rests on his 24 symphonies that are among the most original and striking of the pre-Classical period. He was one of the first composers to introduce the regular use of wind instruments in slow movements and put an increasing emphasis on thematic development. His taut, dramatic style is also remarkable for its employment of bold harmonic progressions, flexible rhythms and highly independent part writing.
Leopold Hofmann was an Austrian composer of classical music.
The International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP), also known as the Petrucci Music Library after publisher Ottaviano Petrucci, is a subscription-based digital library of public-domain music scores. The project uses MediaWiki software, and as of 24 November 2023 has uploaded more than 736,000 scores and 80,700 recordings by 1,900 performers of more than 226,000 works by 27,400 composers. IMSLP has both an iOS app and an Android app.
The Symphony No. 13 in B-flat minor, Op. 36 by Nikolai Myaskovsky was composed in 1933.