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1 CD -
8.554412 - (p) & (c) 2004
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COMPLETE WORKS FOR PIANO FOUR
HANDS AND TWO PIANOS - Volume
12 |
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Johannes BRAHMS
(1833-1897) |
String Quintet No.
2 in G major, Op. 111 - (1890, arr. for
piano 4 hands)
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32' 57" |
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- Allegro ma non
troppo
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14' 03" |
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1 |
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- Adagio
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8' 09" |
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2 |
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- Un poco allegretto |
5' 53" |
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3 |
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- Vivace ma non
troppo presto
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4' 51" |
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4 |
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Piano Quartet No.
1 in G minor, Op. 25 - (1861, arr. for
piano 4 hands 1870) |
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42' 20" |
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- Allegro
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14' 47" |
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5 |
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- Intermezzo: Allegro
ma non troppo
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8' 30" |
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6 |
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- Andante con moto
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10' 06" |
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7 |
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- Presto: Rondo alla
zingarese
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8' 57" |
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8 |
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Silke-Thora MATTHIES | Christian
KÖHN, pianoforte a 4
mani
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Luogo
e data di registrazione |
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Clara
Wieck Auditorium, Sandhausen
(Germania) - 1-3 aprile 1998 |
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Registrazione:
live / studio
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studio |
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Producer |
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Tonstudio
Van Geest
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Cover |
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Woman
on the Beach at Rugen, 1818 by
Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840)
(Oskar Reinhart Collection,
Winterthur, Switzerland / Bridgeman
Art Library)
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Edizione
CD |
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NAXOS |
8.554412 | (1 CD) | durata 1h 15' 17"
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Note |
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Johannes
Brahms was born in Hamburg in
1833, the son of a double-bass
player and his much older wife,
a seamstress. His childhood was
spent in relative poverty, and
his early studies in music, for
which he showed a natural
aptitude, developed his talent
to such an extent that there was
talk of touring as a prodigy at
the age of eleven. It was Eduard
Marxsen who gave him a grounding
in the technical basis of
composition, while the boy
helped his family by playing the
piano in summer inns.
In 1851 Brahms met the émigré
Hungarian violinist Reményi, who
introduced him to Hungarian
dance music that had a later
influence on his work. Two years
later he set out in his company
on his first concert tour, their
journey taking them, on the
recommendation of the Hungarian
violinist Joachim, to Weimar,
where Franz Liszt held court and
might have been expected to show
particular favour to a
fellow-countryman. Reményi
profited from the visit, but
Brahms, with a lack of tact that
was later accentuated, failed to
impress the Master. Later in the
year, however, he met the
Schumanns, through Joachim’s
agency. The meeting was a
fruitful one.
In 1850 Schumann had taken up
the offer from the previous
incumbent, Ferdinand Hiller, of
the position of municipal
director of music in Düsseldorf,
the first official appointment
of his career and the last. Now
in the music of Brahms he
detected a promise of greatness
and published his views in the
journal he had once edited, the
Neue Zeitschrift für Musik,
declaring Brahms the
long-awaited successor to
Beethoven. In the following year
Schumann, who had long suffered
from intermittent periods of
intense depression, attempted
suicide. His final years, until
his death in 1856, were to be
spent in an asylum, while Brahms
rallied to the support of
Schumann’s wife, the gifted
pianist Clara Schumann, and her
young family, remaining a firm
friend until her death in 1896,
shortly before his own in the
following year.
Brahms had always hoped that
sooner or later he would be able
to return in triumph to a
position of distinction in the
musical life of Hamburg. This
ambition was never fulfilled.
Instead he settled in Vienna,
intermittently from 1863 and
definitively in 1869,
establishing himself there and
seeming to many to fulfil
Schumann’s early prophecy. In
him his supporters, including,
above all, the distinguished
critic and writer Eduard
Hanslick, saw a true successor
to Beethoven and a champion of
music untrammelled by
extra-musical associations, of
pure music, as opposed to the
Music of the Future promoted by
Wagner and Liszt, a path to
which Joachim and Brahms both
later publicly expressed their
opposition.
Like Mozart’s, the two string
quintets of Brahms are scored
for two violins, two violas and
cello. The choice is
characteristic. The register of
the violas and the richness of
texture that such an
instrumentation can impart,
whether in chamber music or in
orchestral writing, was very
typical of Brahms, and reflected
in his music for the piano. He
had first attempted the form in
1862, using two cellos, as
Schubert had done, but had
destroyed it, replacing it first
with an arrangement for two
pianos, and later, in a final
version, as a piano quintet.
Brahms had intended his String
Quintet in G major, Op. 111, as
his last chamber music
composition. He wrote it in the
summer of 1890 at Bad Ischl,
following his usual custom of
composing during summer holidays
spent away from the city. It
was, in the event, to be
followed by four further
compositions, the Clarinet Trio,
the Clarinet Quintet, and two
Clarinet Sonatas, the last also
known in an effectively autumnal
version for viola, an instrument
offered in the other works as an
alternative to the clarinet. The
G major Quintet was first
performed in Vienna on 11th
November in the year of its
composition. It starts with a
movement derived from sketches
for a fifth symphony, allowing
the cello an orchestrally
conceived first subject. For the
second subject Brahms turns to
Vienna for inspiration. There is
a shift to B flat major in the
central development, further
modulation leading to the return
of the original key and thematic
material in recapitulation. The
D minor slow movement allows
free variations on the opening
material, until the theme
returns in a simpler form,
originally played by the first
viola. The third movement opens
in a melancholy G minor, the
feeling dispelled by a G major
trio section, which has the last
word, after the re-appearance of
the G minor material. The
quintet ends with a Vivace ma
non troppo presto, a rondo that
finds a place for much else that
is thoroughly Austrian or
Austro-Hungarian in mood, ending
in an energetic Hungarian
czárdás.
Clara Schumann appeared as the
pianist in the first performance
of Brahms’s Piano Quartet in G
minor, Op. 25, given in Hamburg
in November 1861, on the
occasion of the third of a
series of Hamburg concerts that
featured the ladies’ choir, the
Hamburger Frauenchor, informally
established in 1859 and
conducted by Brahms. In the
summer of 1861 he had moved from
his parents’ house, where
marital disagreements made life
uncongenial, to lodge with
friends from the Frauenchor,
where he enjoyed greater
tranquillity. The new piano
quartet was not his first
attempt at the genre. There had
been an earlier piano quartet,
later transposed, revised and
published in 1875 as Opus 60.
The G minor Quartet had been
some years in gestation and
there seemed something
orchestral about the conception.
Brahms himself saw possible
problems of balance between the
demanding piano part and the
strings, and made an arrangement
for two pianos that would avoid
these. In 1937 Schoenberg, aware
of the same possible problem,
successfully rescored the work
for orchestra.
Brahms himself performed the
quartet with members of the
Hellmesberger Quartet on his
first concert appearance in
Vienna in 1862. The critic
Hanslick was at first less
impressed by the work, while he
found Brahms’s playing more that
of a composer than a virtuoso, a
judgement not entirely to the
latter’s discredit. The themes
of the quartet he found, though,
insignificant, dry and prosaic,
nevertheless suggesting that, as
always with Brahms, further
study of the work would reveal
its many virtues. Its first
subject is derived from a simple
motif, of contrapuntal
suggestion, and this forms the
basis of the relatively short
central development. The second
movement, at first with the
title of Scherzo, is a C minor
Intermezzo, with a more
ebullient A flat major trio
section. The Andante con moto
moves into E flat major, its
song-like progress interrupted
by a central C major section,
suggesting a march, although
still in triple metre. The work
ends with a Hungarian rondo,
particularly effective in the
twopiano version, Hungary seen
through the prism of Vienna, an
abiding memory of the composer’s
early association with the
Hungarian émigré violinist Ede
Reményi, with whom he had, in
1853, embarked on his first
concert tour, and of his own
Hungarian Dances.
Keith Anderson
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