[ADDED 22 December 2022] Don't have all these handy? Never fear: here's a free Spotify playlist.
The list is in alphabetical order by composer.
Leroy Anderson |
Debussy: Des pas sur la neige (Footprints in the Snow) – There's a wintry solitude to this music, with its fragmented melody and suggestion of a slow procession through the landscape. It's from the composer's first book of "Preludes" from 1910.
Debussy: The Snow is Dancing – At the other end of the spectrum is this fanciful miniature from the "Children's Corner Suite" from 1908. Unlike most of Debussy's music, the titles are all in English—probably a nod to the English governess of Debussy's daughter Claude-Emma, to whom the suite is dedicated. The music wasn't meant to be performed by children—some of it is pretty challenging—but rather to reflect the world of childhood.
Frederick Delius |
Liszt: Transcendental Etude No. 12, Chasse-neige (Snow storm) – Liszt's twelve "Transcendental Etudes" (Études d'exécution transcendante) are the Mt. Everest of piano music. Originally published in 1837, the pieces were revised to make them less absurdly difficult to play in 1852, but even so they present technical challenges that separate the virtuosi from the run of the mill players. This musical storm begins softly and relentlessly builds to a massive blizzard of notes.
Leopold Mozart: A Musical Sleigh Ride – We don't think much about Wolfgang Mozart's dad these days, but he had a fairly substantial career as a musician and composer. Many of his works have been lost over the centuries but a few—like this charming miniature and his "Cassation in G for Orchestra and Toys" (a.k.a. the "Toy Symphony")—are still performed now and then. Leopold Mozart loved using non-traditional sounds in his pieces, including bagpipes, whistles, and even (in anticipation of Spike Jones) pistol shots.
Wolfgang Mozart: German Dance No. 3, K. 605 (Sleigh Ride) – The younger Mozart's sleigh ride is a lilting dance in three-quarter time complete with tuned sleigh bells and an ingratiating posthorn solo.
A scene from Lieutenant Kijé |
Strauss: An Alpine Symphony – Completed in 1915, this mammoth tone poem (it runs close to an hour) depicts and Alpine ascent and descent, complete with a trek across a glacier and a thunderstorm. Strauss loved the mountains. He built a villa for himself in the Bavarian Alps and often vacationed in Alpine regions. That affection clearly shows in this music.
Tchaikovsky: Symphony No. 1 ("Winter Dreams") – First performed in 1868, Tchaikovsky's first attempt at a symphony had a rough time being born. It took nearly a year to compose and received a fair amount of unflattering criticism along the composer's former teachers. The structure is a bit clunky in places, but the first movement (subtitled "Dreams of a Winter Journey") is so powerfully evocative of a haunted journey through a frigid landscape that I, for one, am inclined to overlook the work's flaws.
Artists of The Royal Ballet in The Nutcracker Photograph © ROH/Johan Persson |
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Sinfonia Antartica (Symphony No. 7) – Adapted from the music Vaughan Williams wrote for the 1947 film “Scott of the Antarctic,” the “Sinfonia Antartica” is pure symphonic wind chill. Its five movements leave an indelible impression of the forbidding landscape and tragic end of Scott’s ill-fated expedition. In the score, each movement is preceded by a literary quotation. Vaughan Williams didn’t explicitly say that they should be read as part of the performance, but when they are (as in the Andre Previn/London Symphony recording from many years ago) the theatrical effect can’t be denied.
Vivaldi: Winter (from "The Four Seasons") – This is easily one of the most vivid bits of tone painting you'll find anywhere, with snowstorms, icy winds, and quiet evenings by the first all colorfully captured.
That's my quick list. I limited myself to orchestral pieces, so Schubert's 1828 "Winterreise" ("Winter Journey") song cycle has been left out in the cold, so to speak, along with (probably) many others. I also rejected Arnold Bax's "November Woods" on the premise that he was thinking more autumnal than wintry. What would you add to the list? Let me know.
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