What is the choral symphony?
In music, the choir symphony is an extended composition written for choir and orchestra. Solo singers can also be used. The singer's voices can play as important as tools in some or all symphony movements. These symphonies are often dramatic or narration in nature, often taking text used by singers from drama, poetry or other literature. They differ from other forms of music where singers have prominently, such as operas and oratorios, the fact that their structure is like conventional symphonies, with complete work divided into movements. "Ode to joy." This part is only a small part of the complete work, but would serve as an inspiration for later composers. The first known person who uses the Term "Chroal Symphony" was French composer Hector Berlioz, who used it to describe his composition "Roméo et Juliette" in 1858. Felix Mendelssohn and Franz Liszt in the 19th century and Sergei Rachmaninoff, Gustav Mahler and 20th.lens.
.In some cases, the choir symphony is composed with a specific text that already has in mind, often uses emotions induced by music to complete words, while in other cases music is written first and the text is added later. Many literature was used as texts for choral symphonies. Examples include Walt Whitman's poems in Ralph Vaughan Williams "A Sea Symphony" "Edgar Allan Poe" The Bells in the Symphony of the same name Sergei Rachmaninoff and the book Psalm of the Bible in the "Symphony of Žamčí" by Igor Stravinsky.
choir symphonies, which also text from an external source do not necessarily imitate the form of the original precisely. Depending on what is necessary to adapt music or specific topics and ideas that the composer wants to emphasize, parts of the original text may be sung from their original order, repeated, omitted or added. Some choral symphonies aso is Ralph Vaughanan Williams, "Sinfonia Antartica", are not based on any text and usesless choral music to induce specific emotions or atmosphere.