Crossword clues for eroica
eroica
- Strong nickname for Beethoven's Third Symphony
- Orchestral premiere of 4/7/1805
- Nickname of Beethoven's Symphony No. 3
- Nickname of a Beethoven symphony
- It premiered in Vienna in 1805
- Beethoven's homage to Napoleon
- Beethoven symphony originally dedicated to Napoleon
- 1805 Beethoven symphony
- 1805 Beethoven premiere
- "__ Variations" (Beethoven piece)
- Work from Beethoven's "middle period"
- What Mencken called "a new order of music"
- Vienna premiere of April 1805
- Vienna musical premiere of 1805
- Vienna debut of 1805
- The Boston Symphony played its second movement to commemorate FDR's death
- Symphony with its own "Cambridge Companion"
- Symphony that heralded musical Romanticism
- Symphony premiere of 1805
- Symphony on Norman Bates's phonograph in "Psycho"
- Symphony No. 3 in E Flat Major, familiarly
- Symphony featuring a funeral march
- Record on Norman Bates' Victrola
- Nickname of Beethoven's Third
- Nickname of a century-old symphony
- New symphony of 1804
- Musical work originally dedicated to Napoleon
- Musical Third?
- Musical premiere of April 1805
- Milestone of classical music
- Its original name was "Bonaparte"
- Early Romantic music masterpiece
- Classical work whose theme is heard in the "Internet Symphony No. 1"
- Beethovens 3rd Symphony
- Beethoven's 3rd symphony
- Beethoven's "valiant" Vienna debut of 1805
- Beethoven's Third
- 1805 Vienna premiere
- 1805 symphony
- 1805 musical premiere
- 1804 symphony
- …his third
- Work first publicly performed at the Theater an der Wien in 1805
- Symphony written for Napoleon
- Beethoven's Third Symphony, familiarly
- 1804 symphony that includes a funeral march
- Symphony in E flat major
- Beethoven's "___ Variations"
- Symphony originally dedicated to Napoleon
- Work with a famous Funeral March
- Symphony with a noted funeral march
- Beethoven symphony nickname
- Musical work that Berlioz called "a heavenly sweetness"
- Beethoven work in E flat
- Symphony completed in 1804
- Symphony whose second movement is a funeral march
- Symphony that premiered in Vienna in 1805
- Musical premiere of 1805
- Beethoven's Symphony No. 3, familiarly
- It was first publicly performed in Vienna in 1805
- Symphony inspired by Napoleon
- Work that marked the start of musical Romanticism
- Musical work whose name means "valiant"
- Orchestral work premiered in 1805
- Symphony whose second movement is marked "Marcia funebre. Adagio assai"
- Beethoven's Third, popularly
- Symphony that premiered 4/7/1805
- Piece heard in "Immortal Beloved"
- Record glimpsed on Norman Bates's Victrola
- Beethoven's "Sinfonia ___"
- Classical record on Norman Bates's turntable in "Psycho"
- Rostov book: 1977
- Symphony originally named "Bonaparte"
- Symphony offering racy stuff
- Name given to Beethoven's Symphony No 3
- Beethoven opus
- Beethoven piece
- Symphony that includes a funeral march
- Beethoven's third, familiarly
- Symphony first performed in April 1805
- Vienna premiere of 1805
- Symphony Beethoven originally dedicated to Napoleon
- Symphonic premiere of 1805
Wikipedia
Eroica may refer to:
Eroica (released in some territories as Heroism) is a 1958 film by Andrzej Munk. It is composed of two separate stories, each featuring the Polish concept of heroism and a role of a hero.
A third segment, Con Bravura, utilizing Polish romantic legend and different in spirit from the first two segments, was meant as the final part of the original film but although completed, was ultimately cut by Munk from the final version. It premiered on Polish Television in 1972 and depicts wartime couriers crossing the Tatra Mountains.
Eroica won the FIPRESCI Award at the 1959 Mar del Plata Film Festival.
Eroica is the third album by Wendy & Lisa, released in 1990 by Virgin Records.
Eroica is a 1949 Austrian film depicting composer Ludwig van Beethoven's life and work. The film is directed by Walter Kolm-Veltée, produced by Guido Bagier with Walter Kolm-Veltée and written by Walter Kolm-Veltée with Franz Tassié. It was entered into the 1949 Cannes Film Festival.
Eroica is a BBC television film that dramatises the first performance of Beethoven's third symphony, the Eroica. It carries the tagline ‘The day that changed music forever’.
The film was directed by Simon Cellan Jones, written by Nick Dear and starred Ian Hart, Tim Pigott-Smith, Anton Lesser and Frank Finlay. The music was played by Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique and conducted by Sir John Eliot Gardiner. It won the Prix Italia for Performing Arts in 2004.