Thursday, December 12, 2019
Handel's Messiah
However you like your Messiah - big or intimate, modern or period, authentic or interpreted - when you listen you become part of an almost 300-year tradition of what may be classical music's most beloved masterpiece.
Monday, November 18, 2019
Bruckner Symphony No. 4
Bruckner's Symphony No. 4 "The Romantic" was a departure from his usual symphonic testaments of faith. It's a journey into the Age of Chivalry, of knights, quests, and - above all - the hunt.
Friday, November 8, 2019
Strauss: Metamorphosen
"Richard Strauss' Metamorphosen for 23 Solo Strings was his musical response to a life, and a world, gone to
pieces."
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Charles Ives Symphony No. 3 & 4
With 19th-century Americana spirit, MTT and the SF Symphony, pianist Peter Dugan, and the SFS Chorus’s musical candor and clarity add an evocative recording of Ives’s songful Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4 to the SFS Media label’s Grammy award-winning discography.
Wednesday, October 30, 2019
Bach Orchestral Suite No. 4
Bach's Orchestral Suite #4 is a dazzling combination of rhythmic complexity and sonic brilliance; all the more amazing in that he wrote it (most likely) just for fun!
Wednesday, October 23, 2019
Shostakovich Symphony No.7 Leningrad
Shostakovich's 7th Symphony became a symbol of the wartime alliance between the US and the USSR. But the road to victory is never easy, and it wasn't long before both the musical and the political symbols of that alliance disappeared
Tuesday, October 15, 2019
Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition
Originally composed for solo piano (and later orchestrated by Ravel), Pictures at an Exhibition was written by Modest Mussorgsky after he visited a retrospective exhibit of the works of his friend Victor Hartmann. The collection of pieces represents a promenade from painting to painting, pausing in front of works called The Gnome, Ancient Castle, and Great Gate of Kiev. Mussorgsky was a member of a nationalistic, anti-conservatory group of young musicians, and he had an unusual ability to interpret visual art in musical expression.
Friday, September 27, 2019
Mozart’s Symphony No. 41, Jupiter
Mozart's final symphony was nicknamed the "Jupiter," and - like the planet and the Roman god that share its name - it still stands out as one of the greatest of its kind.
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
Stravinsky Symphony in Three Movements
Living in Hollywood in the 1940s, Igor Stravinsky couldn't
help but be influenced by the movies. His Symphony in Three Movements was almost
entirely inspired by films—whether or not he cared to admit it.
Monday, September 16, 2019
Schumann Symphony No. 3
Schumann’s Symphony No. 3, Rhenish, completed in 1850 after his much-celebrated appointment as
Municipal Music Director in Düsseldorf, reflects his optimism in the face of new
challenges. Filled with spirited, glorious themes, Rhenish marks the high point in the life of a composer who struggled
with mental illness.
Tuesday, September 10, 2019
Mahler Symphony No. 6
Mahler Symphony No. 6
In summer 1903, Mahler was at his happiest time of
life. Married to the beautiful Alma and
father to two healthy daughters, it doesn’t seem like the time when one would
compose a symphony often called the Tragic. However, in an eerily prescient stroke, this
is exactly what Mahler does. In the
years that followed, Mahler suffered the death of a child, the loss of his
position in Vienna, and learned of his debilitating heart disease—three blows
of fate predicted by the blows of the drum that fell the Hero at the close of
Symphony No. 6.
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
Ravel L'Enfant et les Sortileges
In his fantasy opera "L'enfant et les sortileges," Maurice Ravel
brings together his love of children, animals and fairy stories in a
magical, musical mix.
Prokofiev Symphony No. 5
Prokofiev Symphony No. 5
Composed alongside fellow distinguished Russian
composers at a House of Creative Work northeast of Moscow, Prokofiev’s renowned
Fifth Symphony saw its premiere in January 1945, as Soviet armies had begun their final push to victory over Germany. As Prokofiev raised his baton in the silent
hall, the audience could hear the gunfire that celebrated the news, just
arrived, that the army had crossed the Vistula and driven the German Wehrmacht
back past the Oder river.
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
Street Song
With his piece "Street Song" for brass ensemble, Michael Tilson Thomas - the composer - celebrates both his past and his future.
Friday, June 14, 2019
Mahler Symphony No. 9
Mahler’s last complete work, the Symphony No. 9, was composed following a whirlwind period of great loss and supreme achievement, including the composition of his “symphony without a number,” Das Lied von der Erde. Symphony No. 9 reaches the greatest apex of Mahler’s compositional catalogue, exhibiting his characteristic subtle transition, expansion, and continuous variation at their fullest.
Thursday, May 30, 2019
Shostakovich's Eighth Symphony
Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony made him a war hero, but his Eighth Symphony still got him in trouble with the Soviet government, perhaps because it was less a hymn to heroism than a prayer for peace
Thursday, May 23, 2019
Mendelssohn Symphony No.4
On an extended journey through Italy in 1830 and 1831, Felix Mendelssohn began work on his Fourth Symphony. A wildly talented composer who wrote his famous Octet when he was only sixteen, Mendelssohn was prompted to finish the work when the London Philharmonic Society requested a symphony from him (and offered payment of a hundred guineas). Mendelssohn called it the jolliest music he had ever composed. Although he remained dissatisfied with the symphony and planned numerous revisions, the Italian Symphony still stands as one of his most easily recognizable works.
Friday, May 17, 2019
Henry Brant: Ice Field
Henry Brant: Ice Field
Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony team up with iconoclastic organist Cameron Carpenter to release a one-of-a-kind recording of Henry Brant’s Pulitzer Prize-winning spatial composition, Ice Field. Put on your headphones for a unique Dolby Atmos immersive experience that allows us to hear Brant’s work as it was intended: as a vast acoustical soundscape for 100 players scattered throughout Davies Symphony Hall.
Thursday, May 16, 2019
Mahler Symphony No. 7
Mahler's 7th is sometimes called "The Song of the Night," but it's really a journey from night into day, with some very interesting stops along the way.
Wednesday, May 15, 2019
Beethoven's - Symphony No. 9
Beethoven's Symphony No. 9
Often called the greatest piece of music ever written, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 was the last he would ever write. The first symphony to feature a chorus and vocal soloists, Symphony No. 9 also includes the famous “Ode to Joy.”
click here to enjoy a recording
click here to enjoy a recording
Thursday, May 9, 2019
Debussy La mer
During childhood summers spent at the beaches at Cannes,
Debussy learned to love the unpredictable and ever-changing sea. The most
traditionally ‘symphonic’ of Debussy’s orchestral works, La mer is
comprised of three sketches: From Dawn
to Noon on the Sea, Play of the Waves, and Dialogue of the Wind and the
Sea.
Thursday, May 2, 2019
Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde"
"Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde"
was about passion, inspired by passion, and made possible by passion. That
passion changed the course of Western music history."
Thursday, April 25, 2019
Mozart Symphony No. 31
When Mozart
went to Paris, he may not have found the job he was looking for, but he still
found success, with his stylish Symphony No. 31.
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Mozart Symphony No. 31
Mozart Symphony No. 31
When Mozart
went to Paris, he may not have found the job he was looking for, but he still
found success, with his stylish Symphony No. 31.
Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade
Rimsky-Korsakov’s Scheherazade
Nikolai
Rimsky-Korsakov traveled the world as a naval officer, but it was his musical
journey into the world of the Arabian Nights that became one of his most
colorful and enduring masterpieces.
Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2
Brahms – Piano
Concerto No. 2
When
Johannes Brahms wrote his first Piano Concerto, he was worried about the
judgment of history. By the time he wrote his second Piano Concerto, he was
making history.
Thursday, March 14, 2019
Sibelius Symphony No. 2
At the close of the nineteenth century, Finnish natives were enjoying a renaissance of their native culture, in opposition to their Russian occupiers. Jean Sibelius was swept up in this nationalistic fervor, and composed several patriotic tone poems, including Finlandia. Symphony No. 2, misinterpreted at its premiere as a commentary on the Finnish political conflict, was composed mostly in Italy, where Sibelius was renting a studio. Working with fragments and sketches intended for four separate tone poems, Sibelius then assembled the pieces into this full-fledged symphony.
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
Liszt Piano Concerto No. 1
Liszt Piano Concerto No. 1
Franz Liszt may have
been one of the nineteenth century’s most exasperating underachievers, to say
nothing of committing the unforgivable sin of success on a staggering scale, but
he was a genius. This concerto can remind us. Begun in 1835 at the ripe
old age of 24, Liszt did not complete his first piano concerto until nearly
twenty years later. A final draft appeared in 1849, which was revised
before the 1855 premiere (conducted by Hector Berlioz), and then revised yet
again before its publication in 1856. Béla Bartók called the concerto
“the first perfect realization of cyclic sonata form, with common themes being
treated on the variation principle.”
Brahms Symphony No. 2
Brahms Symphony No. 2
Brahms's Symphony No.2 is generally thought of as his most lighthearted, but it's actually built on the contrasts between light and dark, between sunshine and clouds. Kind of like life.
Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 3
Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 3
Bach's Orchestral Suite No. 3 contains some of his best-known music, including the beautiful "Air on the G String." But it also contains the origins of the modern symphony orchestra.
Thursday, February 7, 2019
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4
The Fourth Symphony was a product of the most turbulent time of Tchaikovsky's life - 1877, when he met two women (Nadezhda von Meck, a music-loving widow of a wealthy Russian railroad baron, and Antonina Miliukov, an unnoticed student in one of his large lecture classes at the Moscow Conservatory), who forced him to evaluate himself as he never had before.
Thursday, January 31, 2019
Beethoven Symphony No. 6
To escape the city of Vienna, Beethoven often spent his summers in the rural counties surrounding it—a love reflected in his Symphony No. 6, Pastoral. With movements titled Awakening of joyful sentiments upon arriving in the country and Scene by the brook, the work depicts life in the country.
Mendelssohn Symphony No. 3
Scotland - the country that gave us haggis, bagpipes, golf and Sean Connery among other world treasures - was also the inspiration for two of Mendelssohn's best-known works: his "Hebrides" Overture and "Scottish" Symphony. There are no actual Scottish tunes in the Symphony; in fact, Mendelssohn professed to dislike all Scottish music, especially the bagpipes. But it's hard to imagine the source of this tuneful work being anything other than the windswept heather of the Highlands.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Sibelius' Four Legends from the Kalevala
Sibelius' Four Legends from the Kalevala
In "Four Legends from the Kalevala," Jean Sibelius explored Finland's mythical past and found his own musical future.
Bruckner's Symphony No. 5
Bruckner's Symphony No. 5
Anton Bruckner grew up an unsophisticated teacher’s son. By the time he reached Vienna and the composition of his Symphony No. 5, he had a sound combining Beethoven’s sense of mystery and suspense, Schubert’s harmony, and Wagner’s breadth in unfolding, plus a symphonic vision all his own.
Handel’s Messiah
Handel’s Messiah
Often called the greatest piece of music ever written, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 was the last he would ever write. The first symphony to feature a chorus and vocal soloists, Symphony No. 9 also includes the famous “Ode to Joy.”
Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 “Eroica”
Beethoven's Symphony No. 3 “Eroica”
The Eroica opened the floodgates for the symphonic outpouring of the nineteenth century–for Beethoven himself, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Bruckner, and the rest. The Eroica was the longest symphony ever written when it was unveiled, and listeners and critics commented widely on that fact, to the composer’s frustration. By 1807 nearly all reactions to the piece were favorable, or at least respectful, and critics were starting to make sense of its more radical elements.
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