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*'''The ''],''''' or '''call to the dairy cows,''' featuring the ] and flute; this segment is often used in ]s to signify daybreak.<br/> *'''The ''],''''' or '''call to the dairy cows,''' featuring the ] and flute; this segment is often used in ]s to signify daybreak.<br/>
And<br/> And<br/>
*'''The Finale,''' an ultra-dynamic "cavalry charge" ] heralded by ]s and played by the full orchestra. This segment is often used in popular media to denote galloping horses or a hero riding to the rescue, and it became the '']'' theme music. It has also used in ] cigarette commercials and a ] commercial incorporating all three cultural icons. The first few bars of The Finale were used again to herald a rescue in ''The Princess Diaries.'' *'''The Finale,''' an ultra-dynamic "cavalry charge" ] heralded by ]s and played by the full orchestra. This segment is often used in popular media to denote galloping horses or a hero riding to the rescue, and it became the '']'' theme music. It has also used in ] cigarette commercials and a ] commercial incorporating all three cultural icons. The first few bars of The Finale were used again to herald a rescue in ''The Princess Diaries.'' It is also heard in the Cartoon Network Paws and Claws commercial.


{{listen|filename=William Tell2.ogg|title=William Tell overture|description=]'s band performs parts 3 (Ranz des vaches) and 4 (Finale) of the overture in 1914.|format=]}} {{listen|filename=William Tell2.ogg|title=William Tell overture|description=]'s band performs parts 3 (Ranz des vaches) and 4 (Finale) of the overture in 1914.|format=]}}

Revision as of 01:18, 19 March 2011

The William Tell Overture is the instrumental introduction to the opera Guillaume Tell (in English, William Tell) by Gioachino Rossini. There has been repeated use (and sometimes parody) of this overture in popular media, most famously for being the theme music for the Lone Ranger radio and television shows. It is quoted by Dmitri Shostakovich in his Symphony No. 15. William Tell was composed in 1829 and was the last of Rossini's 39 operas, after which he went into semi-retirement, although he continued to compose cantatas, sacred music and secular vocal music. Franz Liszt prepared a piano transcription of the overture in 1838 (S.552) and there are also transcriptions by other composers (e.g. a version by Louis Gottschalk for piano duet).

The overture is in four parts, each following the next without pause:

  • The Prelude, a slow passage scored for five solo cellos accompanied by double basses.
  • The Storm, a dynamic section played by the full orchestra. The was frequently used by early Warner Bros. sound cartoons when there was a storm onscreen.
  • The Ranz des Vaches, or call to the dairy cows, featuring the cor anglais and flute; this segment is often used in animated cartoons to signify daybreak.

And

  • The Finale, an ultra-dynamic "cavalry charge" galop heralded by trumpets and played by the full orchestra. This segment is often used in popular media to denote galloping horses or a hero riding to the rescue, and it became the Lone Ranger theme music. It has also used in Lark cigarette commercials and a Jeno Pizza Roll commercial incorporating all three cultural icons. The first few bars of The Finale were used again to herald a rescue in The Princess Diaries. It is also heard in the Cartoon Network Paws and Claws commercial.
William Tell overture Cesare Sodero's band performs parts 3 (Ranz des vaches) and 4 (Finale) of the overture in 1914.
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Score

Instruments

The instruments that are in the score of the overture are: a piccolo, a flute, two oboes (first or second oboe doubles an English horn), two clarinets in A, two bassoons, four horns in G and E, two trumpets in E, three trombones, timpani, triangle, bass drum and cymbals, and strings.

See also

External links

The Lone Ranger
Characters
Television
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