NO.1 Ludwig van Beethoven ------------------------- 74
NO.2 Gustav Mahler ----------------------------------- 40
NO.3 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart -------------------- 31
NO.4 Peter Lynch Tchaikovsky ---------------------- 30
NO.5 Johannes Brahms ------------------------------- 29
NO.6 Anton Bruckner ---------------------------------- 27
NO.7 Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich ------------- 19
NO.8 Antonín Leopold Dvořák ----------------------- 17
NO.9 Franz Joseph Haydn ---------------------------- 16
NO.10 Franz Seraphicus Peter Schubert ---------- 12
Hans Huber (28 June 1852 – 25 December 1921) was a composer from Switzerland who, between 1894 and 1918, composed five operas. His piano concertos are slightly unusual for the form in that they have four movements (scherzos are included in addition to the usual fast, slow, and fast tempo movements).[n 1] He also wrote a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 100, for piano four-hands in all the keys.
Works:
Huber's first symphony, in D minor, subtitled "Tellsinfonie" has a slight programmatic element, derived from the story of the Swiss national hero William Tell. The symphony is perhaps somewhat similar in style and formal restraint to Brahms, although there is perhaps a foreshadowing of Sibelius in some of the orchestral textures.
Symphony n° 1 in D minor "Tellsinfonie", Op. 63 (ca.1882)
Symphony no 2 "B**46;cklin Symphony", Op. 115 (ca.1901)
Symphony no 3 in C major "Heroic" for Soprano and orchestra, Op. 118. (ca.1908)
Symphony no 4 in A "Academic" in the manner of a Concerto Grosso (1909)
Symphony no 5 in F major "The Fiddler of Gmund"
Symphony no 6 in A major Op. 134 (ca.1911)
Symphony no 7 in D minor "Swiss" (1922)
Symphony no 8 in F "Spring-symphony" (1920)