Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Brahms's Serenade
In 1857, Johannes Brahms assumed the post of Clara Schumann, recently departed for Berlin, as piano teacher at the court of Prince Leopold. His pupils and members of his choir loved him, and at the court he reveled in his time to compose, conduct, and study the repertory. It also afforded him a period of cooling off following the death of his mentor Robert Schumann, and allowed him to work towards his great goal of composing symphonies. This first Serenade was called a “Symphony-Serenade” by Joseph Joachim, and is a fresh, inventive, and spirited work.
Friday, February 11, 2011
Mozart's Requiem
Mystery and myth surround Mozart’s Requiem. It was left uncompleted at the composer’s somewhat sudden death, and no one quite knows exactly how much music he left behind. His widow, Constanze, was set with the task of finding another composer to complete the work, while still promoting it as a Mozart composition (in order to receive the full commission fee). After Joseph Eyeler, one of Mozart’s students, was unable to complete the Requiem, Franz Xaver Süssmayr, another former student, finally completed a working version, which stands as the most popular of the many versions still performed today.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Mozart's Symphony No. 33
Throughout Mozart’s childhood, his father Leopold paraded him around the courts of Europe in the hope of gaining the boy’s employment, and therefore a steady cash flow for his family. After many years of traveling, he was hired for a full time position in their hometown of Salzburg. In spring 1779, Mozart met a traveling theater troupe that performed many of his operas and symphonies. It’s likely that this Symphony No. 33, which Mozart composed while employed at the court at Salzburg, was meant as just that: an overture to a theatrical production.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Prokofiev's Symphony No. 1
Following encouragement from his teacher to immerse himself in the works of Mozart and Haydn, Sergei Prokofiev composed his Symphony No. 1, Classical, in 1916-17. Harkening back to his forbears in the realms of form and structure while using the expanded harmonic language of his contemporaries, Prokofiev for the first time composed away from the piano keyboard, lending a more compact and transparent orchestral sound to the work. Written just before the composer left Russia following the abdication of the Tsar and Lenin’s ascent to power, the Classical symphony foreshadowed the neoclassicism of the 1920s and became one of the composer’s most frequently performed works.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Schubert's Symphony No. 5
At 17, Schubert composed his art song masterpiece Gretchen am Spinnrade. The following year, he composed more than 145 more, including Erlkönig. By the time he reached age 19, in 1816, he had already composed a treasure trove of art songs and instrumental sonatas in addition to his first four symphonies. Following a series of personal setbacks, including receiving no response after sending Goethe a packet of songs based on his poems, Schubert composed his Fifth Symphony. Mozart’s Symphony No. 40 in G minor, one of only two he wrote in a minor key, was one of Schubert’s favorites, and is echoed in the fiery minuet movement.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Beethoven's Symphony No. 1
Arriving in Vienna in 1792, with a stack of music he’d composed in Bonn, young Beethoven settled down to study composition with Josef Haydn. By the time he premiered his first symphony in 1800, he had already published an impressive catalogue, including 10 piano sonatas, two cello sonatas, three violin sonatas, five string trios, and six string quartets. Symphony No. 1 opens on a dissonant chord and includes featured wind solos and a third movement scherzo, all reflecting a musical personality that foreshadows Beethoven’s impending departure from his Classical education
Friday, January 7, 2011
Beethoven's Symphony No. 4
In summer 1806, Beethoven had to give up his summer vacation home in order to pay off his and his family’s debts. Despite the financial turmoil, the year was an extraordinarily productive one for him: the composer wrote many of his great works in that year, including the Razumovsky string quartets, the revision of what became Fidelio (including the Leonore Overture No. 3), the Fourth Piano Concerto, and the Fourth and Fifth Symphonies. The Fourth Symphony, often overshadowed by the Third and the Fifth, is perhaps his least frequently performed symphony. The work is a return to the grace and relative simplicity of Beethoven’s earlier classical style. At the middle of the second movement stands an episode that distinguished musical analyst Donald Francis Tovey called “one of the most imaginative passages anywhere in Beethoven.”
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