Wellingtons Sieg
Wellington's Victory
by Ludwig van Beethoven
Concert Band - Sheet Music

Item Number: 22374432
3.2 out of 5 Customer Rating
Price reduced from $51.95 to $49.35
Order On Demand
  • Ships in 4 to 6 weeks
Product
Unauthorized duplication hurts music creators. Please ensure you purchase the number of copies needed to accommodate all members of your ensemble.

Taxes/VAT calculated at checkout.

Ensembles
Publishers
Formats
Item Types
Levels
Concert band concert band - Grade 5

SKU: BF.BM1057-SCORE

Wellington's Victory. Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven. Arranged by Andreas van Zoelen. Baton Music orchestral series. Full score. Baton Music #BM1057-SCORE. Published by Baton Music (BF.BM1057-SCORE).

After the Battle of Vitoria, Beethoven's friend Johann Nepomuk Maelzel talked him into writing a composition for his panharmonicon (a kind of 'mechanical orchestra') to commemorating this battle. The piece, ‘Wellingtons Sieg’ (‘Wellington’s Victory’) was dedicated to the Prince Regent, later King George IV and first performed in Vienna on 8 December 1813 at a concert to benefit Austrian and Bavarian soldiers wounded at the Battle of Hanau, with Beethoven conducting. It was an immediate crowd-pleaser and met with much enthusiasm from early concertgoers and the piece proved to be a substantial money-maker for Beethoven. ‘Wellingtons Sieg’ is something of a musical novelty. Besides the orchestra, on stage there are two 'sides', British and French, both playing the same instruments: Trumpets, Snare Drums, ‘Canon’ and Ratchet. The work has two parts: the ‘Battle’ (‘Schlacht’) and the ‘Victory Symphony’ (Sieges Sinfonie). The first part is programme music describing two approaching opposing armies and contains extended passages depicting scenes of battle. It uses ‘Rule Britannia’ for the British side and ‘Marlbrough s'en va-t-en guerre’ for the French side. The ‘Victory Symphony’ exhibits some typical Beethoven composing techniques. It can be considered as a sonata form that, stripped of the development section, comes equipped with an extended coda. Dutch arranger Andreas van Zoelen transcribed ‘Wellingtons Sieg’ for Symphonic Band.