The work, which lasts about 50 minutes, is
through-composed: performed without breaks, except for a dramatic grand pause at the end of the first movement. The movements are titled as follows (later editions of the score may not show these titles, owing to the composer's request that they be removed):
Ein Heldenleben employs the technique of
leitmotif that
Richard Wagner used, but almost always as elements of its enlarged
sonata-rondo symphonic structure.
I. "Der Held" The first theme represents the hero. The remainder of the work comprises development, recapitulation, and
coda, with occasional new thematic material. The melodies lead into the final section.
VI. "Des Helden Weltflucht und Vollendung" The reappearance of the previous "Hanslick" motive brings in an
agitato episode. This is followed by a pastoral interlude with what Kennedy calls "a bucolic
cor anglais theme". The descending triad now appears slowly,
cantabile, as the head of a new, peaceful theme in E: this is the theme foreshadowed during the violin cadenza. In a final variation of the initial motive, the brass intones the last fanfare, and a serene E major conclusion is reached, signaling the Hero's completion and fulfillment. ==Instrumentation==