Serenade No. 1 in D Major, Op. 11

Composer: BRAHMS, Johannes

Quick Facts

  • Composed between 1857-59
  • Premiered (full orchestra version) in 1860 with the Hanover Court Orchestra conducted by Joseph Joachim.
  • Six movements:
    1. Allegro molto
    2. Scherzo
    3. Adagio non troppo
    4. Minuet
    5. Scherzo
    6. Rondo1

About the Piece

  • Serenade No. 1 in D Major represents Brahms’s first purely orchestral work. The original manuscript was written as a nonet but revised for orchestra at the recommendation of the composer’s friend and colleague, Joseph Joachim. Joachim expressed that the music seemed “of a symphonic character.”
  • The work is classical in style, evoking the instrumental music of Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, and Schubert.
    • Fun fact: at the 1860 premiere, Brahms programmed his Serenade No. 1 with Mozart’s Sinfonia concertante K.364 (in which he played the solo violin part).2

Sources

  1. “Serenade No.1, Op.11 (Brahms, Johannes),” IMSLP, accessed June 4, 2024, https://imslp.org/wiki/Serenade_No.1,Op.11(Brahms,_Johannes).
  2. Michael Musgrave, “Preface: Serenade no. 1 in D major op. 11,” G. Henle Verlag, accessed June 4, 2024, https://www.henle.de/en/Serenade-no.-1-in-D-major-op.-11/HN-9857.

Cut IDs

40716 43668 49376 20527 15544 19598