Arrangement and
transcriptions of
classical and
serious music go back to the early history of
classical music.
Eighteenth century J. S. Bach frequently made arrangements of his own and other composers' pieces. One example is the arrangement that he made of the Prelude from his
Partita No. 3 for solo
violin, BWV
1006. Bach transformed this solo piece into an orchestral
Sinfonia that introduces his
Cantata BWV29. "The initial violin composition was in E
major but both arranged versions are transposed down to D, the better to accommodate the wind instruments". "The transformation of material conceived for a single string instrument into a fully orchestrated
concerto-type movement is so successful that it is unlikely that anyone hearing the latter for the first time would suspect the existence of the former".
Nineteenth and twentieth centuries Piano music In particular, music written for the
piano has frequently undergone this treatment, as it has been arranged for orchestra, chamber ensemble, or
concert band.
Beethoven made an arrangement of his
Piano Sonata No. 9 for
string quartet. Conversely, he also arranged his
Grosse Fuge (one of his
late string quartets) for
piano duet. The American composer
George Gershwin, due to his own lack of expertise in orchestration, had his
Rhapsody in Blue arranged and orchestrated by
Ferde Grofé.
Erik Satie wrote his three
Gymnopédies for solo piano in 1888. Eight years later,
Debussy arranged two of them, exploiting the range of instrumental
timbres available in a late 19th-century orchestra. "It was Debussy whose 1896 orchestrations of the Gymnopédies put their composer on the map."
Pictures at an Exhibition, a
suite of ten piano pieces by
Modest Mussorgsky, has been arranged over twenty times, notably by
Maurice Ravel. Ravel's arrangement demonstrates an "ability to create unexpected, memorable orchestral sonorities". In the second movement, "Gnomus", Mussorgsky's original piano piece simply repeats the following passage: Ravel initially orchestrates it as follows: Repeating the passage, Ravel provides a fresh orchestration "this time with the
celesta (replacing the
woodwinds) accompanied by string
glissandos on the
fingerboard". The arrangement of this song by
Hector Berlioz uses strings to convey faithfully the driving urgency and threatening atmosphere of the original. Berlioz adds colour in bars
6–8 through the addition of
woodwind,
horns, and a
timpani. With typical flamboyance, Berlioz adds spice to the harmony in bar
6 with an E
flat in the horn part, creating a
half-diminished seventh chord which is not in Schubert's original piano part. There are subtle differences between this and the arrangement of the song by
Franz Liszt. The upper string sound is thicker, with violins and
violas playing the fierce repeated
octaves in
unison and
bassoons compensating for this by
doubling the
cellos and
basses. There are no timpani, but
trumpets and horns add a small jolt to the rhythm of the opening bar, reinforcing the bare octaves of the
strings by playing on the second main beat. Unlike Berlioz, Liszt does not alter the harmony, but changes the emphasis somewhat in bar
6, with the note A in the
oboes and
clarinets grating against rather than blending with the G in the strings. "Schubert has come in for his fair share of transcriptions and arrangements. Most, like Liszt's transcriptions of the
Lieder or Berlioz's orchestration for
Erlkönig, tell us more about the arranger than about the original composer, but they can be diverting so long as they are in no way a replacement for the original".
Gustav Mahler's
Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen ("Songs of a Wayfarer") were originally written for voice with piano accompaniment. The composer's later arrangement of the piano part shows a typical ear for clarity and transparency in rewriting for an ensemble. Below is the original piano version of the closing bars of the second song, "Gieng heit' Morgen über's Feld". The orchestration shows Mahler's attention to detail in bringing out differentiated orchestral
colours supplied by woodwind, strings and horn. He uses a
harp to convey the original
arpeggios supplied by the left hand of the piano part. He also extracts a descending
chromatic melodic line, implied by the left hand in bars
2–4 (above), and gives it to the horn. == Popular music ==