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Brahms- Brahms 1 (CD)

SKU: 4012476569369
Regular price 51.00 NIS
Unit price
per
the album cover for Brahms - Brahms 1
the album cover for Brahms - Brahms 1

During the fourteen years in which he worked on his First Symphony, Brahms was under a high pressure of expectation: in the shadow cast by Beethoven, he was forced to take a compositionally convincing position both with respect to the dominant father figure as well as the "New German School." Moreover, he saw himself associated with friends who pressed him for a first symphony. And, finally, in the 1850s the scrupulous, hard working but at times insecure Brahms suffered setbacks in at least two attempts to form a symphony out of already extensively developed compositional material. Among all these obstacles, Beethoven's "model" was undoubtedly the greatest. Concerning this, the following remarks by Brahms have come down to us: he explained to his friend Carl Bargheer of Detmold: "If one still attempts to write symphonies after Beethoven, then they have to look entirely different." Some ten years later, after he had already composed a first version of the opening movement of his First Symphony, he admitted to the conductor Hermann Levi: "I will never compose a symphony! You have no idea how I feel when I always hear such a giant marching behind me" - meaning Beethoven. Strauss' tone poem Death and Transfiguration "is an example of a poetic idea that was retrospectively assigned. Alexander Ritter, poet-musician in Meiningen also gave the new composition the title and program: Ritter initially thought of the title "Seraphic Fantasy" - thus a first hint of a metaphysical program - but then decided on "Death and Transfiguration". But that's not all: Strauss had a poem by Ritters that existed in two versions preceded the printed score, combining music and poetry. This dedicated program came into being only after the composition had been completed - whether Strauss was creatively guided by a "poetic idea" remains to be seen.

Tracklist:

  1. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: I. Un Poco Sostenuto - Allegro (Live)
  2. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: II. Andante Sostenuto (Live)
  3. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: III. Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso (Live)
  4. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: IV. Adagio - Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio (Live)
  5. Tod Und Verklärung, Op. 24, Trv 158 (Live)

UPC > 4012476569369

Format > New CD

Label > Musicaphon

Shop online at Darkside Records.

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Format: New CD/Classical

Brahms- Brahms 1 (CD)

SKU: 4012476569369
Regular price 51.00 NIS
Unit price
per

Release Date: 03.19.2021

 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

> Due to the current limited nature of music titles, ALL CD & Vinyl purchases are limited to FOUR copies per customer, per item. If you place multiple orders for multiples of the same title, your subsequent orders will be canceled.

During the fourteen years in which he worked on his First Symphony, Brahms was under a high pressure of expectation: in the shadow cast by Beethoven, he was forced to take a compositionally convincing position both with respect to the dominant father figure as well as the "New German School." Moreover, he saw himself associated with friends who pressed him for a first symphony. And, finally, in the 1850s the scrupulous, hard working but at times insecure Brahms suffered setbacks in at least two attempts to form a symphony out of already extensively developed compositional material. Among all these obstacles, Beethoven's "model" was undoubtedly the greatest. Concerning this, the following remarks by Brahms have come down to us: he explained to his friend Carl Bargheer of Detmold: "If one still attempts to write symphonies after Beethoven, then they have to look entirely different." Some ten years later, after he had already composed a first version of the opening movement of his First Symphony, he admitted to the conductor Hermann Levi: "I will never compose a symphony! You have no idea how I feel when I always hear such a giant marching behind me" - meaning Beethoven. Strauss' tone poem Death and Transfiguration "is an example of a poetic idea that was retrospectively assigned. Alexander Ritter, poet-musician in Meiningen also gave the new composition the title and program: Ritter initially thought of the title "Seraphic Fantasy" - thus a first hint of a metaphysical program - but then decided on "Death and Transfiguration". But that's not all: Strauss had a poem by Ritters that existed in two versions preceded the printed score, combining music and poetry. This dedicated program came into being only after the composition had been completed - whether Strauss was creatively guided by a "poetic idea" remains to be seen.

Tracklist:

  1. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: I. Un Poco Sostenuto - Allegro (Live)
  2. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: II. Andante Sostenuto (Live)
  3. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: III. Un Poco Allegretto E Grazioso (Live)
  4. Symphony No. 1 C Minor, Op. 68: IV. Adagio - Allegro Non Troppo, Ma Con Brio (Live)
  5. Tod Und Verklärung, Op. 24, Trv 158 (Live)

UPC > 4012476569369

Format > New CD

Label > Musicaphon

Shop online at Darkside Records.

Follow us on Instagram.