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Question: 1812 Overture!?
I need the musical elements of the 1812 overture!. My son is still trying to find this information!. What rythum, tempo, tone and melody does it have!. I'll give whoever answers the best answer!.!! Please help!!Www@QuestionHome@Com


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker:
http://www!.youtube!.com/watch!?v=lzMGzBKRt!.!.!.

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky wrote the 1812 Overture (full title: Festival Overture "The Year 1812" in E flat major!. Tchaikovsky worked on the overture from October 12 to November 19, 1880!. In his own words, he found it "very loud and noisy!." The commission was to mark the 1882 Moscow Exhibition, and specifically the consecration of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior which was built there to give thanks for the Russian victory during the Napoleonic Wars!. The premiere was duly given on August 20, 1882 and was an immediate success!. It was subsequently published as his Op!. 49 and enjoyed many performances throughout Russia!. Tchalkovsky’s 1812 Overture is almost guaranteed to induce deafness!.

nstrumentation
(* - These parts are able to omit!.)
Piccolo (combine Flute), Flute 1, Flute 2, *Oboe1, *Oboe 2, *English Horn, *Bassoon1, *Bassoon 2, *Eb Clarinet, Bb Clarinet 1, Bb Clarinet 2, Bb Clarinet 3, *Alto Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, *Eb Contrabass Clarinet (does not appear on score), *Bb Contrabass Clarinet, Alto Saxophone 1, Alto Saxophone 2, Tenor Saxophones 1&2, Baritone Saxophones 1&2, Trumpet 1, Trumpet 2, Trumpet 3, Trumpet 4, Horns 1&2, Horns 3&4, Trombones 1&2, Bass Trombone, Euphonium, Bass Tuba, *String Bass, Timpani, Snare Drum, Tambourine, Bass Drum, Triangle, Cymbals, Canon (Bass Drum or Synthesizer), Church Bells (Concert Chimes), *Banda (Trumpets 1-4, Horns 1-4, Trombones 1-3, Bass Trombone or Euphonium, Bass Tuba)!.

Sixteen cannon shots are written into the score of the Overture!. Beginning with the plaintive Orthodox hymn "God Preserve Thy People" played by eight cellos and four violas, the piece moves through a mixture of pastoral and militant themes portraying the increasing distress of the Russian people at the hands of the invading French!.[1] At the turning point of the invasion—the Battle of Borodino—the score calls for five Russian cannon shots confronting a boastfully repetitive fragment of La Marseillaise!. A descending string passage represents the subsequent attrition of the French forces, followed by victory bells and a triumphant repetition of "God Preserve Thy People" as Moscow burns to deny winter quarters to the French!. A musical chase scene appears, out of which emerges the anthem "God Save the Tsar!," thundering with eleven more precisely scored shots!.

Although God Save the Tsar! was the Russian National Anthem in Tchaikovsky's time, it was not the anthem in 1812!. There was no official Russian anthem until 1815, from which time until 1833 the anthem was "Molitva russkikh", Prayer of the Russians, sung to the tune of God Save the King!.Www@QuestionHome@Com

The first ans!. by naomi j!. is really good!. However, some of what you are asking has multiple answers: the tempo varies from a very slow, solemn tempo to a rapid one at the end (where the cannon fire, the part most people recognize when the Boston Pops play it for the 4th of July concert there, broadcast on PBS)!.

She has the info on tunes, melody are also varies!.

So any answer should clarify WHERE in the score the info is being given!.

E!.g!., the tempo at the end appears to be in "cut time", w/2 beats to the measure!.Www@QuestionHome@Com