Showing posts with label Emily E. Hogstad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emily E. Hogstad. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2026

The Most Hauntingly Slow Pieces in Classical Music

  

The works below aren’t ranked by beats per minute, and aren’t necessarily the slowest. Instead, they’re famous pieces in which composers deliberately mark a slow and steady tempo, asking listeners to linger, reflect, and feel.

Some are consoling. Others are devastating. Taken together, they explore emotions like ritual, grief, and even transcendence.

Arvo Part – Spiegel im Spiegel   

One of the most recognisable slow classical pieces of the late 20th century, Spiegel im Spiegel (Mirror in the Mirror) moves at a steady but glacial pace.

Arvo Pärt

Arvo Pärt

Its repeating piano figures and long-breathed melodic lines create a feeling of suspended calm, as if time has slowed to match a listener’s breathing and heartbeat.

Nothing rushes; nothing presses forward. The music simply exists.

Edward Elgar – Nimrod from the Enigma Variations   

Marked Adagio, “Nimrod” may not be extreme in tempo on paper. But when conductors give a particularly expansive or weighty interpretation, it can feel very slow. (Leonard Bernstein‘s interpretation was especially famous for this.)

This is dignified, almost ceremonial slowness. Emotional layers build on top of each other and accumulate with each step forward.

Edward Elgar

Edward Elgar

“Nimrod” has been a popular tribute piece for orchestras to play after national tragedies. Maybe this connotation has led to the slow speed that many conductors prefer.

Samuel Barber – Adagio for Strings   

Barber’s Adagio for Strings unfolds in one long, aching arc, with slow phrases seemingly stretched to their breaking point.

The excruciating slowness leads to an unforgettable climactic dissonance and a hushed collapse afterwards.

The music moves slowly, not because the notes are particularly long, but because the harmonies build on one another in such a heartbreaking way.

Richard Wagner – Parsifal Prelude   

Wagner‘s final opera opens with music that barely seems to move.

Marked Sehr langsam (“very slowly”), the Prelude from Parsifal sounds more like a ritual than a narrative device, establishing a sacred atmosphere in which time feels ceremonial and suspended.

Richard Wagner

Richard Wagner

Forward motion exists only to sustain a state of religious reverence, making it the perfect introduction to Wagner’s final opera, devoted to themes of spirituality and transcendence.

Ludwig van Beethoven – String Quartet No. 15 in A-minor, Movement 3   

One of the most profound slow movements ever written, the Heiliger Dankgesang (“Holy Song of Thanksgiving”) was composed after Beethoven experienced a major health scare involving intestinal issues that he feared might prove fatal.

It alternates between austere, hymn-like slowness and moments of gentle motion marked “Neue Kraft fühlend” (“feeling new strength”), when time becomes something to be contemplated.

Christian Horneman: Ludwig van Beethoven, 1803 (Beethovenhaus Bonn)

Christian Horneman: Ludwig van Beethoven, 1803 (Beethovenhaus Bonn)

This slowness isn’t sorrowful or static; like the Parsifal Prelude, this music is spiritual.

Olivier Messiaen – Louange à l’Eternité de Jésus from Quartet for the End of Time  

Written in a German prisoner-of-war camp, this movement plays with the idea of time in multiple ways.

In the fifth movement, the cello’s endlessly sustained melody floats above softly pulsing chords, creating music that seems detached from time.

French composer Olivier Messiaen

Olivier Messiaen

It can easily send a listener into a trancelike state. The reverent tempo becomes theology, reflecting Messiaen‘s steadfast Catholic faith: the slow motion seems to portray the infinite and the divine.

Gustav Mahler – Symphony No. 9, Movement 4   

Mahler‘s final completed movement is a farewell stretched to its absolute limit.

The music – written for a massive orchestra – moves slowly, then more slowly still, fragmenting as it goes.

Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler

Rather than resolving clearly and cleanly, after nearly half an hour, it just dissolves, the strings tapering to nothing, leaving behind silence that feels both earned and irreversible. Time doesn’t stop; it just fades away.

Morton Feldman – Rothko Chapel   

Pulse is barely perceptible in Morton Feldman‘s Rothko Chapel. Sounds appear, linger, then vanish without clear direction.

In fact, Feldman removes the sense of progression almost entirely, creating music that exists for a particular duration rather than expands on a narrative. Listening feels less like following a path and more like inhabiting a space.

For good measure, here’s one last bonus piece that might be classified less as slow classical music and more as a sound experiment:

John Cage – Organ²/ASLSP (As SLow aS Possible)    

This is the outer limit of musical slowness.

Cage’s Organ²/ASLSP asks its performer to play, as the title’s acronym suggests, “as slow as possible.”

John Cage

John Cage

It is currently being performed in a church in Halberstadt, Germany. That performance began in 2001 and is only scheduled to end in 2640.

Here, each note is so long that tempo ceases to function as a musical parameter at all.

Conclusion

Across eras and styles, these works reveal a shared impulse: to use slow tempos to portray a reflective mood and to ask big questions about grief, faith, and memory. Maybe the most moving music doesn’t need to go very far at all.

In their own ways, each of these pieces invites listeners to get lost in time: to be present and experience each musical moment as it comes.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

The Strangest Deaths of Famous Composers: Part 2

 by Emily E. Hogstad  July 15th, 2026



In Part 2 of our series on strange composer deaths, we move into the twentieth century – an era shaped by modern medicine, world wars, and rapidly changing artistic worlds.

Ravel on his deathbed © Lebrecht Music & Arts

Ravel on his deathbed © Lebrecht Music & Arts

These composers did not die quietly or predictably. Instead, their final days were marked by misdiagnosed illnesses, institutionalisation, sudden accidents, wartime chaos, or shocking medical failures.

Today, we’re looking at some of the strangest deaths of famous composers.

Hugo Wolf (1903)  

In 1897, composer Hugo Wolf was entering the final stages of a syphilis infection.

At the time, he was suffering from delusions that he was the intendant of the Vienna Opera. His friends only succeeded in sending him to an asylum by telling him it was the Emperor’s home, where he would sign the paperwork to finalise his new position.

He was in and out of institutions over the following years. At one point, he attempted suicide by jumping into a lake, but he survived – and then was committed for the rest of his life.

In early 1902, doctors determined he’d have just a few days of suffering left. But he survived for a full year more, only dying of a pulmonary infection in February 1903.

Enrique Granados (1916) 

Spanish composer Enrique Granados died a tragic hero’s death.

In 1916, in the middle of World War I, he was touring America. Toward the end of that tour, he accepted one last recital invitation and postponed his passage.

It was a fateful decision. Crossing the English Channel, his British vessel was torpedoed by a German U-boat.

In the chaos, Granados found a spot on a lifeboat…but then he saw his wife in the water and jumped into the ocean to save her. (Women of the 1910s, who usually dressed in heavy and restrictive clothing, were especially prone to drowning.)

Both died.

Alexander Scriabin (1915)  

Russian composer Alexander Scriabin had an active creative imagination.

In the 1910s, he conceived a multimedia extravaganza called Mysterium, to last seven days and be performed in the Himalayas.

While he was working on this project, a boil on his lip – possibly originating from shaving – became infected.

He began running a high fever and developed septicemia. Nine days later, he was dead, along with his dreams for Mysterium.


Engelbert Humperdinck (1921)  

In September 1921, composer Engelbert Humperdinck attended a performance of the opera Der Freischütz. His son was serving as the stage director of the production.

During the performance, Engelbert suffered a heart attack. He died the following day from a second heart attack.

Wolfram would go on to make a career in opera and write a biography of his father.

Alban Berg (1935)  

In 1935, composer Alban Berg set aside his demanding opera Lulu to work on a violin concerto, which he wrote quickly over the summer.

The death of Alma Mahler‘s daughter Manon at the age of 18 inspired him to subtitle the magical, melancholy work “To the memory of an angel”: a subtitle that would prove to be prophetic.

Berg returned to Lulu, hoping to finish it, but in November 1935, he was bitten by an insect. A boil developed on his back and became infected. He ended up developing sepsis and dying on Christmas Eve.

Lulu remained unfinished, although portions would be presented in the years to come.

After the death of Alban’s widow, Lulu was finished in the 1970s by composer and conductor Friedrich Cerha.

Louis Vierne (1937)  

On 2 June 1937, blind composer and organist Louis Vierne played a fateful organ recital at Notre-Dame Cathedral. It would be his 1,750th – and final – one.

He had finished the main body of his program and was just about to begin improvising from themes submitted to him in Braille.

Louis Vierne at Notre Dame

Louis Vierne at Notre Dame © Rollin Smith

He pulled out a stop, had some kind of cardiac event, and then fell off the bench. His foot was stuck on the low E-pedal note. The note resonated through the cathedral.

Amazingly, he had always expressed a wish to die while playing at the organ.


George Gershwin (1937)  

In 1937, composer George Gershwin began experiencing an array of concerning symptoms: headaches, coordination issues, and mood swings. He even started smelling burning rubber.

However, doctors chalked it up to stress and his workaholic tendencies.

But on 9 July 1937, he collapsed, and doctors realised he might have a brain tumour.

He had emergency surgery, and a large tumour (now believed to be a glioblastoma) was removed from his skull.

Tragically, he did not survive. He was just 38 years old.


Maurice Ravel (1937)  

Composer Maurice Ravel suffered a similar fate to Gershwin the same year.

In October 1932, he was in a taxi accident. It was originally thought that Ravel’s injuries were minor, but in retrospect, it seems like he never quite recovered. He began forgetting things like his address and even his music.

He began suffering from head pain in 1937. That December, he underwent experimental brain surgery in the hope of diagnosing his condition. No solid diagnosis was made, but no tumour was found.

Ravel never really gained lucidity and became unable to swallow. He died on 28 December 1937.


Anton Webern (1945)   

Composer Anton Webern died in a tragic accident in the chaos of post-WWII Mittersill, Austria.

One night after dinner, he stepped outside his house to smoke a cigar: a much-appreciated gift from his son-in-law, who was active in the wartime black market.

At the same time, that same son-in-law welcomed two Americans…who, it turns out, were actually soldiers visiting to question him. Webern’s son-in-law was arrested.

In the hubbub, one of the soldiers rushed outdoors and – inexplicably and indefensibly – shot Webern three times.

His family moved the composer to a bed and called the doctor, but his injuries were too grave to survive.

Conclusion

Every death is a tragedy, but when a composer’s life ends suddenly, violently, or under deeply unsettling circumstances, the loss can feel especially acute.

Many of these composers died in the midst of active careers, leaving behind unfinished works and unanswered artistic questions. It’s impossible not to wonder what music was lost along with them.

At the same time, they remind us that behind even the most sophisticated music were fragile human lives, shaped by historical forces beyond their control.

Knowing their stories deepens our understanding of their music and sharpens the sense of urgency, vulnerability, and humanity that still resonates in their works today.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Best Classical Music for Working From Home (Matched to Your Task)

  

Today, we’re looking at the best classical music to listen to while working from home, organised by the kind of work you’re trying to do.

For Deep Focus: Analysis, Writing, and Complex Problem-Solving

When work demands your full cognitive attention – whether you’re untangling a complex coding problem, drafting a complicated document, or analysing spreadsheets – you need music that is complicated to mask distractions, but structured enough not to surprise you.

These three pieces are especially reliable for jump starting sustained concentration.

Person working from home on laptop

© longevity.technology

Bach’s Goldberg Variations  

Bach wrote the Goldberg Variations for a harpsichordist employed by an insomniac count who wanted something to occupy his sleepless nights.

The thirty variations share an underlying harmonic structure but never get repetitive, offering just enough variety to keep the mind gently engaged without ever demanding its full attention.

Bach’s The Well-Tempered Clavier  

Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier consists of two volumes of preludes and fugues for solo keyboard, each in a different key.

This is Bach that is both systematic and meditative. The voices enter, answer, and interweave in patterns that feel inevitable – your brain tracks them just enough to stay calm, but not enough to be pulled away from your work.

Haydn’s String Quartets   

Between 1755 and 1799, Classical-era composer Joseph Haydn wrote nearly 70 string quartets. In fact, he came to be known as the “father of the string quartet.”

By and large, they lack the drama or cutting-edge dissonance of Beethoven’s, and are generally more genial: two traits that make these pieces especially intriguing for those working at home.

Any of the quartets will work, but try the Op. 76 set of six, which includes two nicknamed “Emperor” and “Sunrise.”

For Repetitive Tasks: Email, Data Entry, Administrative Work

Thankfully, not all work-from-home demands the full weight of your concentration.

For the kind of tasks that are necessary but not particularly demanding – things like working on your inbox, updating a spreadsheet, filling in a form, etc. – you want music that is a little more energising: something with momentum and a clear pulse that carries you forward without interrupting your train of thought.

Vivaldi’s Four Seasons  

Nowadays, this is the most famous Baroque-era work ever written, and for good reason: its rhythmic energy, combined with its evocative melodies, is infectious.

Each of the four concertos has its own character, but they share a forward motion and a brightness that makes them excellent companions for ploughing through the less glamorous parts of the working day.

If you get tired of the Four Seasons, you can always try out Vivaldi’s other concertos. He wrote over five hundred!

Bach’s Brandenburg Concertos   

Bach’s Brandenburg concertos consist of six concertos, each scored differently, all sharing the same irresistible buoyancy.

The third concerto in particular – scored for strings and continuo – has a relentless, joyful energy.

The Brandenburg concertos are also a convenient length: at around ninety minutes for the complete set, they can be scheduled for any mid-afternoon slump.

Mozart’s Divertimenti   

Mozart’s divertimenti were written for entertainment: light, cheerful, undemanding music for social occasions.

That makes them ideal for the workday: they are all pleasant company that never overstay their welcome or require all of your attention to enjoy.

The Divertimento in D major, K. 136, is a perennial favourite of musicians and music-lovers – for good reason, given its cheer and bustle.

For Creative Work: Writing, Design, or Anything Requiring Inspiration

Creative work is in a strange middle ground when it comes to creating work playlists: you need enough mental quiet to let ideas surface and your internal monologue to run, but silence on its own can feel oppressive.

Music that is slightly impressionistic – that suggests moods and atmospheres, rather than the Baroque era drive and structure – tends to work best for this purpose.

Satie’s Gymnopédies  

Erik Satie’s most famous works are so spacious and unhurried that they seem to exist outside of time itself.

The Gymnopédies – three short piano pieces written when Satie was a twentysomething composer in 1888 – are almost weightless, hovering in a kind of gentle ambiguity.

For creative work where you need your own thoughts to surface, this music is ideal.

Debussy’s Préludes   

Debussy’s piano music is incredibly evocative with its impressions of water, mist, moonlight, and even submerged cathedrals.

The two books of Préludes are particularly good background music – each piece is short and varied, so the collection offers gentle change without jarring interruption.

Chopin’s Nocturnes  

Chopin’s nocturnes occupy a very particular emotional territory: pensive, lyrical, occasionally melancholy, but never overwrought.

The later nocturnes – Op. 55, No. 1 in F minor and Op. 62, No. 1 in B major – have an especially ruminative quality that is great background music for sustained creative effort.

Final Thoughts

Here are a few suggestions as you put together your work-from-home classical music playlist.

Avoid music with vocals in a language you understand. Your brain’s language centers will process the words whether you want them to or not, and that can impact your ability to write or read. We wrote about that here: https://interlude.hk/8-surprising-ways-classical-music-can-help-you-focus-and-study/.

Watch out for dramatic dynamic contrasts – sudden fortes after a quiet passage are the enemy of concentration. Baroque music and minimalism tend to be the safest choices for this reason.

Familiarity helps! Classical music that you already know well is less likely to demand your attention than something you’re hearing for the first time. The first time you hear the Goldberg Variations, you will probably be listening to every note. The fifteenth time? You’ll go the whole morning without being distracted by it – and just comforted instead.

Friday, July 10, 2026

10 Best Short Works by the Great Composers

  

The greatest composers have an uncanny ability to compress entire worlds into small spaces: a prelude that feels like a cathedral, a motet that suspends time, a piano miniature that captures an entire universe of grief.

Today, we’re looking at some examples. Here are some of the best short works by the great composers.   

Few pieces are as deceptively simple as this opening prelude from Bach‘s Well-Tempered Clavier.

Built almost entirely from flowing broken chords, the music unfolds with a serene inevitability. There are no fireworks, just harmonies moving forward with quiet confidence.

Elias Gottlob Haussmann: Johann Sebastian Bach, 1748 (Leipzig: Bach-Archiv)

Elias Gottlob Haussmann: Johann Sebastian Bach, 1748 (Leipzig: Bach-Archiv)

Yet within two minutes, Bach creates a sense of architectural balance so complete that another composer, Charles Gounod, later layered a melody on top to create his famous “Ave Maria.”

It’s a reminder that profundity doesn’t require complexity – or length.  

Written just months before his death, this four-minute motet distills Mozart‘s sacred style to its essence.

The harmonies are gentle but luminous, unfolding with serene inevitability.

In a scant 46 measures, Mozart achieves a spiritual awe that many composers spend entire masses trying to find. 

Beethoven is often associated with titanic symphonies and stormy sonatas. But this brief rondo shows his mischievous side.

Virtuosic, breathless, and slightly unhinged, “Rage Over a Lost Penny” feels like a comic outburst. Sudden dynamic contrasts and tumbling passagework make the piece feel barely contained.

Christian Horneman: Ludwig van Beethoven, 1803 (Beethovenhaus Bonn)

Christian Horneman: Ludwig van Beethoven, 1803 (Beethovenhaus Bonn)

The title wasn’t Beethoven’s, but it fits: the music whirls and sputters with the manic energy of someone being driven mad by an inconvenience.  

At barely two minutes long, this prelude feels like a confession.

The left hand descends in quietly desperate, repeated chords. Meanwhile, the right hand sings a restrained, sorrowful melody. The climax is dark but resigned.

Chopin compresses an entire Romantic emotional arc into a miniature: intimate, fragile, and devastating.  

Late in his life, Brahms wrote some of his most personal music, and this Intermezzo is among those pieces.

This solo piano work is tender without being sentimental. Its rocking rhythm and warm harmonies create a feeling of nostalgic reflection.

Johannes Brahms, c. 1872

Johannes Brahms, c. 1872

Beneath the surface, subtle inner voices shift and color the mood, creating different gorgeous gradations of bittersweet emotion.

In five minutes, Brahms captures the ache of memory – as well as the comfort of it. 

Despite its title, Ravel insisted that this was not a lament for a dead princess, but rather a pavane that such a princess might have danced to.

Whether melancholy or nostalgic, the piece shimmers with a truly regal elegance.

Its slow procession, delicate orchestration, and restrained melody show Ravel’s extraordinary command of colour: French refinement distilled into its purest musical form.  

Few arias have achieved the global recognition of “Nessun dorma.”

Beginning in hushed anticipation and building toward the triumphant “Vincerò!” (“I will win!”), Puccini crafts a miniature drama in just a few minutes.

Giacomo Puccini

Giacomo Puccini

The orchestration swells, the tenor line climbs, and the emotional payoff is immediate and overwhelming.

This aria proves that even within the context of a major opera, just a few minutes can make a major impression.   

Composed as part of a patriotic pageant protesting Russian censorship, Finlandia became a national symbol.

The opening brass erupts with defiance, and the central hymn section unfolds with noble calm.

In just eight minutes, Sibelius moves from protesting oppression to joyful affirmation. It is a political statement and a symphonic poem intertwined.  

Few works have become so synonymous with public mourning as Barber’s Adagio for Strings.

Built from a single rising phrase that gradually intensifies before collapsing into silence, Barber’s Adagio seems to stretch time itself.

The harmonic language is modern but accessible. The emotional trajectory – from sorrow to despair to resignation – is unforgettable.   

To end, we jump into the late 20th century.

John Adams

John Adams

Adams’ four-minute orchestral burst is sheer rhythmic exhilaration. A relentless woodblock pulse drives shimmering harmonies and bright brass fanfares.

It’s propulsive, witty, and unapologetically modern: a flash of brilliance and orchestral virtuosity.

Conclusion

Short pieces reveal something essential about great composers. Without the scaffolding of large forms, there’s nowhere to hide. Every note must matter.

From Bach’s poised architecture to Adams’ kinetic brilliance, these works prove that genius does not depend on duration. Sometimes the smallest forms leave the deepest impression.

The History of the Waltz: From Folk Dance to Symbol of Imperial Collapse

  

No one could have predicted that it would become a metaphor for imperial glamour, psychological instability, and even civilizational collapse.

Today, we’re looking at the evolution of one of the most beloved genres in classical music: the waltz.

The Waltz

The Waltz

Tracing its generations-long transformation reveals how composers turned a social dance into one of the most symbolically charged genres in European music.   

The Ländler – a rustic Austrian dance in triple meter – was a direct ancestor of the waltz.

This set of six ländlers by Beethoven, dating from 1802, remains firmly grounded in the genre’s nascent conventions.

The result is a set of communal dances with regular rhythms and conventional harmonies that are pleasant and easy to dance to.  

We see a change with Weber.

His piece Invitation to the Dance is not simply a waltz; it’s an entire narrative scene.

The introduction depicts a gentleman approaching a lady and asking to partner with her. She accepts. The waltz proper portrays their dance, and the coda their farewell.

Importantly, this piece was written for the concert stage, not the ballroom. Here, the dance becomes part of a broader narrative: Weber has moved beyond writing dance music and has begun writing music about dancing.   

By the 1820s, the waltz had begun spreading beyond communal spaces. It became refined, aestheticised, and increasingly divorced from its folk origins, evolving into music meant to be played in domestic spaces at the family piano.

Schubert‘s version of the waltz is intimate and elegant, and much less rustic than its predecessors, with a new and striking poignancy.

In this slender piece, a listener can hear how the waltz genre is coming into its own as something separate from – and more sophisticated than – the ländler.   

In his Symphonie fantastique, composer Hector Berlioz tells the fictional story of a gifted young artist who becomes obsessed with an unattainable love interest.

In the second movement of the symphony, the protagonist attends a glittering ball and imagines seeing his beloved there.

The beloved’s theme – known as idée fixe – interrupts the swirling waltz, revealing the young artist’s single-minded obsession.

Here, the waltz becomes a tool for a composer to use while crafting a programmatic, extramusical narrative.  

Chopin‘s waltzes are harmonically adventurous, emotionally volatile – and famously undanceable. These aren’t works meant to accompany physical movement; they’re vehicles for emotional expression, not dance music.

This waltz is beautiful, but also tinged with bitterness and a touch of ennui.

It is magnetic listening, but its tempo is tugged around so much that it would be impossible for amateur dancers to actually dance a waltz to.   

As a young man, Johann Strauss II took over his composer father’s dance orchestra. As he became successful, his orchestra grew in size, popularity, and prestige – and so did his waltzes.

As his waltzes gained popularity among the elite, they became potent symbols of Austrian wealth and power, solidifying Vienna’s reputation as the capital of 19th-century European elegance.

Tales from the Vienna Woods includes a zither part, a reference to the dance’s folk roots, especially those found in the zither-playing rural population that lived in the Vienna Woods, just outside the capital city.

Two decades later, he wrote the Emperor Waltz, composed to celebrate a friendly, politically important visit between the emperors of Germany and Austria-Hungary: a diplomatic event between imperial powers, about as far removed from the dance’s humble rustic origins as it is possible to get.

Strauss helped to broaden and cement the extramusical connotations of the waltz. By the late 19th century, waltzes were no longer merely soundtracks for a population’s social life; they were also celebrations of wealth, political power, and imperial identity.     

In the third movement of his Fifth Symphony, Mahler took the waltz and turned its grandeur into something darker than it had ever been before.

Here, the triple meter lurches, with accents landing awkwardly. The joy feels manic, the nostalgia strained.

One gets the impression of aristocratic musicians determined to keep playing their dance, even as something strange and sinister lurks just outside their door.  

In 1910, composer Richard Strauss (not to be confused with Johann Strauss) wrote a comic opera called Der Rosenkavalier (The Knight of the Rose), starring aristocratic Viennese characters from the 1740s.

For this work, Strauss wrote lush, nostalgic, theatrical waltzes that were more emotionally evocative than historically accurate.

In fact, the music is knowingly anachronistic, given that the story is set half a century before waltzes became popular. It’s all winking historical fiction.

These waltzes aren’t just beautiful music. They also give us, as modern listeners, a glimpse into how Viennese audiences of the early 20th century perceived themselves and their culture.  

During World War I, French composer Maurice Ravel drove an ambulance on the front lines as his country fought against Austria and Germany.

After the war ended, one of the first major pieces he completed was the ballet La valse, employing a famously Austrian genre for his own creative purposes.

The work begins with a misty mood. Fragments eventually coalesce into a glittering Viennese waltz before spiralling out of control in truly apocalyptic fashion.

Many listeners hear in La valse a metaphor for the 20th-century collapse of Old Europe after the conflagration of World War I. Ravel denied this interpretation, writing that it was his homage to Johann Strauss and that he envisioned the piece set in 1855, long before the war.

Regardless of the interpretations that the composer or his listeners have brought to the table, it’s clear that this is not a normal waltz. We have come a long and dizzying way from the genre’s humble beginnings in the early 19th century. The waltz is now a symbol for something bigger than itself.

Conclusion

Over a single century, the waltz became a musical genre beloved the world over – and one weighed down by a variety of fascinating extramusical connotations.

Of course, the waltz didn’t take on all that baggage in just one go with one work. Instead, that change relied on a long line of great composers to build on each other’s work, until the dance could no longer be effectively separated from the connotations surrounding it.

What began in rural Austrian villages as a communal dance ended, a century later, as music haunted by nostalgia, empire, and ruin.

Few genres in Western music have taken on so much cultural meaning in so little time.

Monday, July 6, 2026

Why Writing a First Symphony Terrified Even the Greatest Composers

  

Writing a first symphony has never been a casual undertaking.

Throughout the history of classical music, the symphony has stood as the ultimate achievement: a genre tied to ambition, talent, and legitimacy, leading to inevitable comparisons to the past. A failed symphony wasn’t just a private disappointment; it unfolded in front of critics, patrons, and rivals.

classical composers composing music

To compose a symphony is to step directly into the shadow of giants – and for many of history’s greatest composers, that shadow proved terrifying.

From Johannes Brahms wrestling for two decades with the burden of Beethoven’s legacy, to Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky suffering physical collapse while finishing his Symphony No. 1, the “first symphony crisis” is a surprisingly common chapter in music history.

Some composers feared they wouldn’t – or couldn’t – measure up. Others feared national humiliation. One nearly lost his career entirely after a disastrous premiere.

Today, we’re looking at six composers who were deeply stressed about writing their first symphony – and what their struggles reveal about the pressure of entering the symphonic tradition.

Ludwig van Beethoven – Symphony No. 1   

Ironically, given the sway that his symphonies would have over future generations, Ludwig van Beethoven himself waited until he was nearly thirty to publish his first symphony.

He had already established himself in Vienna’s music world with piano sonatas and chamber works. But he also understood the heights that his predecessors, Mozart and Haydn, had brought the symphony to. Therefore, even Beethoven felt the weight of the composers who came before him.

Julius Schmid: Beethoven's Walk in Nature

Julius Schmid: Beethoven’s Walk in Nature

Beethoven’s first symphony had several striking elements. Its slow introduction and its opening dissonances grab a listener’s ear from the start.

From there, the work’s unexpected accents and sudden dynamic changes reveal him to be a composer willing to innovate and part with the traditions of the past.

Johannes Brahms – Symphony No. 1   

No one had a more infamous struggle while writing his first symphony than Johannes Brahms.

After his mentor, Robert Schumann, declared Brahms the future of music in 1853, when he was only twenty years old, Brahms felt crushed by expectations.

Johannes Brahms

Johannes Brahms

He began sketching his first symphony soon after but, intimidated, abandoned several early attempts.

In 1872, he went so far as to tell a conductor friend, “I shall never write a symphony! You can’t have any idea what it’s like always to hear such a giant [i.e. Beethoven] marching behind you!”

However, after years of growth and artistic maturation, he finally finished his first symphony in 1876. The work’s gestation took over two decades.

Although Brahms’s symphony is recognised as a masterpiece today, it also never escaped that Beethovenian shadow. In fact, similarities between Beethoven’s final symphony and Brahms’s first garnered it the nickname “Beethoven’s Tenth.”

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky – Symphony No. 1   

While writing his first symphony, nicknamed “Winter Dreams”, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky struggled with poor health, dealing with insomnia, headaches, anxiety, and depression. The symptoms got so bad that he was afraid he was dying.

At one point, doctors told him to stop working entirely. He later wrote that he feared he would die before finishing it.

Unlike Brahms, his stress wasn’t only about living up to Beethoven’s legacy. It was also about proving that a Russian composer could master the Austro-Germanic tradition of symphonic writing, while still infusing the work with his Russian identity.

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

At this time, a group of five nationalist composers, nicknamed the “Mighty Handful”, were rejecting European academic traditions and trying to establish a uniquely Russian school of music.

“Winter Dreams” was ultimately overshadowed by Tchaikovsky’s later symphonies, but its Russian character encouraged the blossoming of nationalism in Russian – and later Soviet – orchestral music.

Sergei Rachmaninoff – Symphony No. 1  

The premiere of Rachmaninoff’s first symphony was an infamous disaster.

Storm clouds first appeared when elder composer Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov sat in on a rehearsal and told Rachmaninoff, “Forgive me, but I do not find this music at all agreeable.”

Conductor Alexander Glazunov under-rehearsed the orchestra and made a variety of cuts. He was also an alcoholic, and possibly drunk at the rehearsals and premiere.

Sergei Rachmaninoff

Sergei Rachmaninoff

Not surprisingly, the premiere went off the rails so badly that Rachmaninoff fled the concert hall while it was still ongoing. Critics were vicious.

After the failed performance, Rachmaninoff fell into a three-year depression that required hypnotherapy before he could compose again.

For years, the symphony’s score was deemed lost, and it was only reconstructed in 1945, after Rachmaninoff’s death. Today, the work is often reassessed as bold and structurally ambitious.

A few years after the catastrophic failure, Rachmaninoff came back with his second piano concerto, one of the most famous pieces of classical music ever written.

But his first symphony nearly ended his career before it began.

Jean Sibelius – Symphony No. 1   

Jean Sibelius waited until his thirties to compose his first symphony, which was written between 1898 and 1899. It came after he heard Tchaikovsky’s final symphony performed in Helsinki in the mid-1890s.

He related to Tchaikovsky’s music, writing to his wife, “There is much in that man that I recognise in myself.”

Daniel Nyblin: Jean Sibelius, ca 1898–1900

Daniel Nyblin: Jean Sibelius, ca 1898–1900

Despite that, he was Finnish at a time of tension with Russia and rising nationalism, and he wanted his music to make statements about Finnish identity.

He was unsatisfied after the symphony’s premiere in the spring of 1899, and embarked on revisions in 1900.

Unfortunately for Sibelius, his mental block surrounding symphonies would surface again at the end of his career, after he’d written seven symphonies.

His eighth symphony was commissioned and even scheduled for performance, but he never finished the score. Before he died, he burned what he’d written.

The fate of that scrapped eighth symphony demonstrates how deeply Sibelius identified with the symphony as a measure of artistic legitimacy – and how reluctant he was to release a symphony he felt was less than perfect.

Gustav Mahler – Symphony No. 1   

Remarkably, Gustav Mahler – who would go on to become one of the foremost symphonists of his generation – was initially leery about presenting his first symphony as such.

In fact, at its 1889 premiere in Budapest, he didn’t even call it a symphony. Instead, he labelled it a “Symphonic Poem in Two Parts.”

Despite the hedging, critics were hostile. For years afterwards, Mahler dithered. He revised it repeatedly, cut a movement, rewrote the orchestration, and even provided a program to guide listeners through the work’s story (and then retracted it).

Gustav Mahler

Gustav Mahler

Throughout his career, Mahler advocated for Beethoven’s music; he even arranged Beethoven’s symphonies for a larger, late-Romantic orchestra.

When it came to composition, Mahler metabolised Beethoven’s influence in his work, from using a choir in the final movement of his second symphony to employing an echo of the “fate theme” from Beethoven’s fifth in his own fifth symphony.

Mahler clearly understood the lineage behind the Austro-Germanic symphony and respected it. That was reflected in his work, from his first symphony – and beyond.

Conclusion

The first symphony is rarely just a beginning. It is a declaration to the musical world: I have something big and important to say.

For Brahms, that declaration took more than twenty years to make. For Tchaikovsky, the idea of doing so ruined his health. For Rachmaninoff, it triggered a crisis that nearly silenced him forever. Even Sibelius, Mahler, and Beethoven approached their first entries into the genre with caution, insecurity, and an acute awareness of the genre’s storied history.

The irony is striking: many of the composers who feared writing their first symphony ended up redefining the genre.

Maybe that’s the true test of a symphonist: the willingness to stand in the shadow of the past, be intimidated by it – and still write anyway.