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Slavonic Dance in B major, Op.72, No.1

by Antonín Dvořák (1841–1904)
Programme noteOp. 72 No. 1Key of B major
~175 words · 192 words

Having made a lot of money out of Brahms’s Hungarian Dances for piano duet, the German publisher Simrock turned to a little known Czech composer for what he hoped would be a similarly successful set of Slavonic Dances. The eight pieces that Dvorak sent to him in 1878 proved to be so popular that when he asked the by now famous composer for another set of Slavonic Dances eight years later he had to pay ten times as much for them.

“It’s devilishly difficult to write the same thing twice over,” Dvorak complained. Miraculously, however, there is no sign in the second set of Slavonic Dances (published in 1886 as Op.72) of anything but effortless creative spontaneity. The first of them, based on the Slovak odzmek, is one of the most vigorous of all in its outer sections and one of the most abundantly melodious in the rather more lyrical middle section. As with the first set of Slavonic Dances, the orchestral version of the second set was written (by the composer himself) at much the same time as the piano-duet version.

From Gerald Larner’s files: “Slavonic Dances, Op.72/1”