Serenade in Eb for 13 Winds, op 7 - study score (Gertsch) [2,2,2,2+1 - 4]
When he was a mere 18 years old, Richard Strauss composed the highly Romantic, one-movement Serenade for Wind Instruments, op. 7. Extremely popular among wind players to this day, this work recalls in instrumentation and structure Mozart's "Gran Partita," which certainly served as a model for Strauss. The serenade was not premiered in its Bavarian homeland as might have been expected, but rather in Dresden, in 1882, under the direction of the then much-esteemed conductor Franz Wllner, who had also given the inaugural performances of Richard Wagner's Rheingold and Die Walkre and later premiered Strauss' tone poems Till Eulenspiegel and Don Quixote. So it was a great honour for the young Bavarian! Editor Norbert Gertsch presents this little masterwork here for the first time in Urtext quality for which not just the first edition but also the autograph manuscript was scrutinised fastidiously. -the publisher
For a matching set of parts (with full score), see item 128684.