This is a list of symphonies in G minor written by notable composers.
Composer | Symphony | Notes |
---|---|---|
Kurt Atterberg | Symphony No. 4 "Sinfonia Piccola", Op. 14 | (1918, revised 1943-5) [1] [2] |
Johann Christian Bach | Symphony, Op. 6, no. 6, T. 264-1 | (pub. c. 1770) |
Franz Ignaz Beck | Symphony, Op. 1, no. 1 (Callen 1, published 1758) [3] | |
Symphony, Op. 2, no. 2 | (Callen 8, published 1760) [4] | |
Symphony, Op. 3, no. 3 | (Callen 15, published 1762) [5] | |
Julius Benedict | Symphony, Op. 101 | (composed 1873) [6] |
William Sterndale Bennett | Symphony No. 5 (WoO 31) | (1835–36) |
Symphony No. 6 Op. 43 | (1864, revised 1867) | |
Franz Berwald | Symphony No. 1 "Serieuse" | (1842, revised 1844) [7] |
Gaetano Brunetti | Symphony No. 22 | (1783) |
Adam Carse | Symphony No. 2 | (c. 1908) |
Carl Czerny | Symphony No. 6, Op. posth. | (1854) [8] |
Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf | Symphony Grave g1 | (by 1768) [9] |
Joachim Nicolas Eggert | Symphony No. 4 | |
Ernst Eichner | Symphony Op. 6, No. 2 | (1771–72) |
Louise Farrenc | Symphony No. 3 , Op. 36 | (1847) |
Anton Fils | Symphony | (by 1760) [10] |
Eduard Franck | Symphony | (1852/1856 – lost) |
Gaspard Fritz | Symphony Op. 6, No. 6 | (after 1770) |
Gerhard Frommel | Symphony No. 2 (for small orch.) | (1944–45) |
Johann Joseph Fux | Symphony K.306 | (1709) |
Niels Gade | Symphony No. 6, Op. 32 | (1857) |
Friedrich Gernsheim | Symphony No. 1, Op. 32 | (1875) |
Theodore Gouvy | Symphony, Op. 87 | (pub. 1893) [11] |
Alexander Gretchaninov | Symphony No. 5, Op. 153 | (1936) [12] |
Asger Hamerik | Symphony No. 5, Op. 36 | (1889–91) |
Johan Peter Emilius Hartmann | Symphony No. 1, Op. 17 | (1835) |
Joseph Haydn | Symphony No. 39 | (by 1768) |
Symphony No. 83 "La Poule" ("The Hen") | (1785) | |
Andrés Isasi y Linares | Symphony No. 2 | (1918) |
Vasily Kalinnikov | Symphony No. 1 | (1894-5) [13] |
Jan Kalivoda | Symphony no. 7 (WoO/01) | (1841) [14] |
Paul Kletzki | Symphony No. 2 | (1928) |
Leopold Koželuch | Symphony Op. 22, no. 3, PI: 5 | (1787) |
Franz Krommer | Symphony No. 7 | [15] |
F.L.Æ. Kunzen | Symphony | (1795?) [16] |
Franz Lachner | Symphony No. 8, Op. 100 | (1851) [17] |
Édouard Lalo | Symphony | (1886) [18] |
Simon Le Duc | Symphony ("a tre") Op. 2 No. 2 | (1767) |
Pierre van Maldere | Symphony Op. 4, No. 1 | (pub. 1764) |
Witold Maliszewski | Symphony No. 1, Op. 8 | (1902) [19] |
François Martin | Symphony Op. 4, No. 2 | (pub. 1751) |
Étienne Méhul | Symphony No. 1 | (1808–1809) |
Felix Mendelssohn | String Symphony No. 12 | |
Ernest John Moeran | Symphony | (1924–37) [20] |
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Symphony No. 25, K. 183 | (1773) |
Symphony No. 40, K. 550 | (1788) | |
Nikolai Myaskovsky | Symphony No. 12 , Op. 35 "Kolkhoze Symphony" ("The Collective Farm") | (1931–32) [21] |
Josef Mysliveček | Symphony, Op. 1, No. 5 (E10:g1) | (pub. 1764) |
Alberto Nepomuceno | Symphony | (1893) |
Carl Nielsen | Symphony No. 1, Op. 7 | (1891) |
Otto Olsson | Symphony, Op. 11 | (1902) [22] |
Karl von Ordonez | Symphony in G minor, Brown G6 | (lost) |
Symphony in G minor, Brown G7 | (date of composition unknown) [23] | |
Symphony in G minor, Brown G8 | (c. 1775) [24] | |
Gavriil Nikolayevich Popov | Symphony No. 3 "Heroic", a.k.a. "Spanish", Op. 45 | (1946) |
Cipriani Potter | Symphony No. 10 | (1832) [25] [26] |
Joachim Raff | Symphony No. 4, Op. 167 | (1871) [27] |
Carl Reinecke | Symphony No. 3, Op. 227 | (premiered 1895) [28] |
Franz Xaver Richter | Symphony Riemann 27 | (c. 1740) [29] |
Symphony No. 29 "with fugue" | ||
Henri-Joseph Rigel | Symphony "No. 8" | (pub. 1783) |
Julius Röntgen | Symphony | (1930 July) [30] |
Antonio Rosetti | Symphony, Murray A42 | (1787) |
Albert Roussel | Symphony No. 3 , Op. 42 | (1929–30) |
Anton Rubinstein | Symphony No. 5, Op. 107 | (1880) [31] |
Ernst Rudorff | Symphony No. 2, Op. 40 | (published 1890) [11] |
Giovanni Battista Sammartini | Sinfonia, J.-C. 56 | |
Sinfonia, J.-C. 57 | ||
Sinfonia, J.-C. 59 | (incomplete) | |
Robert Schumann | Symphony Zwickauer, WoO29 | (1832–33? Incomplete) |
Dmitri Shostakovich | Symphony No. 11, Op. 103 "The Year 1905" | (1957) |
Johann Stamitz | Symphony ("Orchestral Trio") Op. 4, No. 5 | (pub. 1758) |
Wilhelm Stenhammar | Symphony No. 2, Op. 34 | (1911–15) |
William Grant Still | Symphony No. 2 "Song of a New Race" | (1936-7) [32] |
George Templeton Strong | Symphony No. 2, Op. 50, Sintram | (premiered 1893) |
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky | Symphony No. 1, Op. 13 "Winter Daydreams" | (1866) |
Sergei Vasilenko | Symphony No. 1, Op. 10 | (1904–1906) [11] [33] |
Louis Vierne | Organ Symphony No. 4 , Op. 32 | (1914) |
Georg Christoph Wagenseil | Symphony WV 418 | (early 1760s) |
Johann Baptist Wanhal | Symphony, Bryan catalog Gm1 | (c. 1771) [34] [35] |
Symphony, Bryan catalog Gm2 | (date not known) [35] | |
Mieczysław Weinberg | Symphony No. 1 , Op. 10 | (1942) [36] |
Christoph Ernst Friedrich Weyse | Symphony No. 1, DF 117 | (1805) [37] |
Joseph Wölfl | Symphony, Op. 40 | (pub. 1803) |
Yevgeny Fyodorovich Svetlanov was a Soviet and Russian conductor, composer and pianist.
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.
Yevgeny Kirillovich Golubev was a Soviet and Russian 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.
Benjamin-Gunnar Cohrs was a German conductor, music scholar, and publicist on music.