Peer Gynt, Suite No. 1, Op. 46 , by Edvard Grieg , was published in 1888 and consists of four orchestral movements selected from the extensive incidental music he composed for Peer Gynt , the dramatic poem by Henrik Ibsen . Although the complete stage music was written earlier (1874–75), Grieg later extracted the most vivid and autonomous numbers, shaping them into two concert suites. Suite No. 1 remains the most frequently performed and has become one of the defining works of musical Romantic nationalism. Movements: I. Morning Mood The opening movement, Morning Mood , depicts Peer Gynt watching the sunrise in the Sahara Desert. Despite the exotic setting, the gentle flute melody—decorated with birdlike trills—evokes a distinctly Nordic dawn rather than an African landscape. The theme soon passes to the oboe, with the two instruments alternating gracefully before the full orchestra enters, led by the strings. A flowing, wave-like texture suggests the shimmering play of sunlight on wa...
The Trocadéro concert hall in Paris, whose monumental organ provided the ideal setting for the premiere of Franck’s Pièce héroïque . In 1878, César Franck was invited to participate in the inauguration of the monumental pipe organ built by Cavaillé-Coll for the Trocadéro concert hall in Paris. For this historic occasion, Franck composed Trois Pièces pour Grand Orgue , a triptych designed to reveal the expressive and architectural power of the modern concert organ. The third and most imposing of these works bears the title Pièce héroïque . In it, Franck explicitly aims to demonstrate the grandeur, strength, and symphonic potential of the organ as an autonomous concert instrument, no longer confined to liturgical function. The Trocadéro organ itself was a marvel of its time: equipped with four manuals and sixty-six stops , installed in a vast concert hall with a capacity of nearly 5,000 listeners. The image is striking—France’s most distinguished organist performing on a colos...