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1 CD -
8.557685 - (p) & (c) 2006
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COMPLETE WORKS FOR PIANO FOUR
HANDS AND TWO PIANOS - Volume
15 |
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Johannes BRAHMS
(1833-1897) |
Symphony No. 3 in
F major, Op. 90 - (1883, arr. for 2
pianos)
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34' 43" |
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- Allegro con brio
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12' 25" |
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1 |
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- Andante
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8' 35" |
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2 |
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- Un poco allegretto |
5' 43" |
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3 |
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- Allegro
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8' 00" |
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4 |
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Symphony No. 4 in
E minor, Op. 98 - (1884, arr. for for 2
pianos 1885) |
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40' 33" |
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- Allegro non assai |
13' 09" |
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5 |
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- Andante moderato
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11' 33" |
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6 |
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- Presto giocoso
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5' 49" |
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7 |
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- Allegro energico e
passionato
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10' 03" |
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8 |
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Silke-Thora MATTHIES | Christian
KÖHN, pianoforti |
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Luogo
e data di registrazione |
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Clara
Wieck Auditorium, Sandhausen
(Germania) - 31 ottobre / 6 novembre
2000 |
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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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Swans
in the Reeds, c. 1820 by Caspar
David Friedrich (1774-1840)
(Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Russia /
Bridgeman Art Library)
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Edizione
CD |
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NAXOS |
8.557685 | (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, as a
pianist rather than as a
string-player, 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 was able to use his talents
by teaching and by playing the
piano in summer inns, rather
than in the dockside taverns of
popular legend, a romantic idea
which he himself seems later to
have encouraged.
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.
The first of Brahms’s symphonies
was slow in gestation. Overawed
by the example of Beethoven and
the manifold expectations of his
friends, and unresponsive to
their anxious queries, he
eventually completed his
Symphony No. 1 in C minor, Opus
68, in the summer of 1876. He
was still busy with the fourhand
piano arrangement of the first
symphony, when, in the summer of
1877, he started work on his
Symphony No. 2 in D major, Opus
73, while staying for the first
time at Pörtschach on the
Wörthersee, completing it at
Lichtental in the autumn. The
first performance was given in
Vienna on 30th December,
followed in 1878 by publication,
after the necessary corrections
of the score and the four-hand
piano version, during a second
summer at Pörtschach.
In the summer of 1883 Brahms
took rooms in the spa town of
Wiesbaden, perhaps to be near
the young singer Hermine Spies,
his Hermione without an ‘o’,
whose musical abilities served
as inspiration for his Opus 96
and Opus 97 songs. Symphony No.
3 in F major, described by a
contemporary as Brahms’s Eroica,
after the preceding Pastoral,
was first performed in Vienna on
2nd December. In the four-hand
piano version it is the second
piano that introduces the
opening wind chords, before the
first piano adds the impressive
descending theme, with its nod
to Robert Schumann and
characteristic mixture of major
and minor. The clarinet A major
second subject is entrusted to
the first piano, a pastoral
contrast to the grandeur of the
first theme. The forceful
conclusion of the exposition is
followed by the full chords that
open the central development.
The clarinet and bassoon opening
of the C major Andante is
offered by the first piano, as
the second adds the brief
interjections of the strings,
and the clarinet and bassoon
second subject is also entrusted
to the first piano. Similarly
the cello theme that starts the
C minor third movement is heard
at the outset from the first
piano, with its viola
accompaniment, while the second
weaves the cross-rhythm of the
violins, a world away from the
traditional scherzo. It is the
second piano that takes up the
principal theme on its return in
the French horn, after the trio
section, with its syncopated
accompaniment. The last movement
opens sotto voce and in unison,
before the first piano takes up
the chordal treatment of the
theme by the woodwind. The
second subject of this imposing
sonata-form movement translates
the repeated note triplets of
second violins and violas into
acceptable piano idiom, with
characteristic cross-rhythms.
The symphony ends with none of
the defiance of Beethoven, but
rather with gently suggested
memories of the motif that
started the whole work,
concluding a work that the
contemporary critic Eduard
Hanslick found artistically the
most perfect of the first three
Brahms symphonies.
The next summer brought the
beginning of work on the fourth
and last of Brahms’s symphonies,
the Symphony in E minor, Op. 98.
This was completed at the same
summer resort of Mürzzuschlag
the following summer, to be
performed under the composer’s
direction at Meiningen in
October. The symphony is
amazingly convincing in its
four-hand piano version, from
the quiet serenity of the
opening and the massive grandeur
that follows, mingled with
lyricism, its structure
transparent in the reduced
version. In the second movement
Richard Strauss imagined a
funeral procession moving
silently across moonlit heights,
suggesting, perhaps, an
evocative painting by Caspar
David Friedrich. A cello theme
assumes prominence, with a
decorative first violin part,
after which the march resumes.
The scherzo opens forcefully.
Although it lacks a formal trio
section, there is a relaxation
of tension at the heart of the
movement, before the original
material returns in full vigour.
It seems that Brahms had long
contemplated a final movement in
chaconne or passacaglia form,
derived from his study of Bach.
The movement starts with the
passacaglia theme, scored in the
orchestral version for wind
instruments, now reinforced in
grandeur by three trombones. In
the thirty variations that
follow Brahms demonstrates his
mastery of the form and his debt
to tradition, the whole revealed
in the greatest clarity in the
piano reduction, at one time the
only sure means of hearing the
work.
Keith Anderson
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