What level of music is the wild bee flying?

Flying wild bees is a tune of Grade 8.

Flying Wild Bees is the work of the famous Russian composer rimsky Kosakov, which was created in 19. This interlude is often played separately, and it is called "Wild Bees Flying", Allegro, A minor, 2/4 time, single trilogy. There is a brief introduction at the beginning, and the main feature of the melody is the chromatic progression of numerous changes.

there is a slight contrast in the middle section, and then it gradually transits to reappearance. When reproducing, the sound area is improved, and some factors in the middle section appear in the end. The whole song goes on in one go, with a rapid and dense semitone, vividly depicting the musical image of wild bees flying. This song was also adapted for piano solo by Rachmaninov; H James adapted for jazz trumpet solo, etc.

The background story of Flying Wild Bees

Flying Wild Bees was originally an orchestral interlude in the opera The Story of Tsar Sardan. The main idea of the opera is: Tsar Sardan marries Militeresa. Out of jealousy, the elder sister of Militeresa falsely accused the Tsar of giving birth to a monster. The tsar believed it. Both mother and son were persecuted and put into wooden barrels and thrown into the sea.

The wooden bucket floated to a desert island, and Prince Gordon escaped from danger and grew up, and then rescued a swan chased by a fierce eagle on the island (the swan is the incarnation of the princess). The princess turned the prince into a wild bee and flew back to the palace, flying back and forth and stabbing the tsar and those gossiping relatives. After the Tsar Sardan repented, he came to the island to reunite with MirTheresa.