Thanks again Pabmusic for the further elucidation.
Of course only 5 symphonies were published during Dvorak's lifetime - a mere slip of the keyboard
My remark regarding revision points to the fact that Dvorak in his symphonies did revise/amend them immediately following the first play-through/performance, by amending the orchestration and sometimes adding another (counter-)melody, none of these leading to great differences, withonly 3/5 op.24/76 being more thouroughly revised before publication, as you rightly remark.
None of these amendments are even remotely comparable with the recomposing (if you like) of the Bruckner symphonies, but more with Mozart's amendments in his 40th symphony (g-minor KV550), or Beethoven's in his eighth.
As the "Bells of Zlonice" was never performed during Dvorak's lifetime and the score got astray, the composer was unable to revise the score.
Of course only 5 symphonies were published during Dvorak's lifetime - a mere slip of the keyboard
My remark regarding revision points to the fact that Dvorak in his symphonies did revise/amend them immediately following the first play-through/performance, by amending the orchestration and sometimes adding another (counter-)melody, none of these leading to great differences, withonly 3/5 op.24/76 being more thouroughly revised before publication, as you rightly remark.
None of these amendments are even remotely comparable with the recomposing (if you like) of the Bruckner symphonies, but more with Mozart's amendments in his 40th symphony (g-minor KV550), or Beethoven's in his eighth.
As the "Bells of Zlonice" was never performed during Dvorak's lifetime and the score got astray, the composer was unable to revise the score.
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