What were you listening to? (CLOSED)

Started by Maciek, April 06, 2007, 02:22:49 AM

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Gold Knight

Dmitri Shostakovich--Symphony No. 5 in D Minor, Op.47, featuring bernard haitnik conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra.
Dmitri Shostakovich--Symphony No.9 in E-Flat Major, performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra under the wand of Bernard Haitnik.
Ludwig Van Beethoven--Symphony No.1 in C Major, Op.21 and Symphony No.2 in D Major, Op.36, both featuring John Eliot Gardiner leading the Orchestre Revolutionnaire et Romantique.

Gold Knight

On Spotify:

Robert Schumann--Symphony No.1 in B-Flat Major, Op.38 {"Spring"} and Symphony No.2 in C Major, Op.61, both featuring the New York Philharmonic and Leonard Bernstein.
Franz Schubert--Symphony No.8 in B Minor {"Unfinished"} and Symphony No.9 in C Minor, D.944 {"The Great"}, both performed by the Cleveland Orchestra under the baton of George Szell.

TheGSMoeller

Playlist for the evening...

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Todd





Just a bit better with each listen.  That's actually saying quite a bit.
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

Panem et Artificialis Intelligentia

Coopmv

Now playing the following CD from my Beethoven collection ...


Mirror Image

Quote from: PaulR on May 27, 2012, 02:36:12 PM
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Absolutely gorgeous opening to the opera.

Absolutely, Paul. I love all of Janacek's operas. I'm about to be revisiting this one and From the House of the Dead soon. But now playing:

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Listening to Scythian Suite. Scintillating performance.

Coopmv

Now playing the following CD for a second listen ...


TheGSMoeller



Poulenc: Mass in G

Snuck in a little Poulenc before bedtime, then I was wondering what the hell Poulenc was doing in my bed. (cymbal crash).

Seriously though, I've always been impressed with the compositional versatility of Poulenc, including his sacred and secular choral music, which I find ranks among the best of the 20th Century.

Mirror Image

Quote from: TheGSMoeller on May 27, 2012, 08:26:07 PMI've always been impressed with the compositional versatility of Poulenc, including his sacred and secular choral music, which I find ranks among the best of the 20th Century.

Absolutely, Greg. Poulenc had a wider range than most give him credit for. His chamber works are still some of the finest of the 20th Century IMHO but I do agree that his choral works are just as distinguished.


Mirror Image

Now:



This is still the finest Job I've heard and I own almost all of them. Thanks again to Greg for this recommendation. It was a solid one.

Antoine Marchand

Mozart - The Complete Piano Concertos

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Murray Perahia, piano

CD7: Concertos for Piano & Orchestra No. 17, K. 453 & No. 18, K. 456

I found (and decided to share) these interesting notes about the concerto No. 17, one of my favorite Mozart's piano concertos:

QuotePiano Concerto No. 17 in G Major, K. 453
Mozart composed this concerto in early 1784 and entered it in his catalog on April 12. The first performance was given on June 13 of that year in the Viennese suburb of Döbling. The orchestra consists of one flute, two oboes, two bassoons, two horns, and strings.
...
According to Mozart's expense book, on May 27, 1784, he purchased, for 34 Kreutzer, a pet starling that learned to whistle the first five measures of the finale of this concerto. Biographers sometimes confuse which came first, the bird or the tune, although since Mozart had already entered the concerto in his catalog on April 12, it seems clear that the music was finished by then and that it was Mozart who taught the tune to the starling and not the other way around.
Mozart's pet was a member of the Sturnus vulgaris, the European starling that now thrives in this country as well. The starling is a virtuoso mimic—the American Scientist journal reported a starling repeating verbatim, after hearing it said just once, "Does Hammacher Schlemmer have a toll-free number?"—and it has an uncanny ear for musical patterns. Mozart and his starling agreed on the seventeen-note theme for this concerto finale except that the bird always sang one note sharp and held another too long.
Mozart's popularity with the Viennese concert public can be gauged from the number of piano concertos he wrote each year; 1784 was the peak year, with six new concertos. Those are the first works that Mozart entered in the catalog he started that February—a detailed listing, complete with date, instrumentation, and the opening bars of each new piece of music. Both the first entry, a piano concerto in E-flat (K. 449) and this G major concerto, the fifth item, were written not for Mozart's own use, but for one of his most gifted students, Barbara Ployer, often called Babette. Mozart said she paid him handsomely for it, though its value to musicians through the years can't be rendered in common currency.
Barbara Ployer gave the first performance on June 13 at her family's summer home in the Viennese suburb of Döbling, accompanied by an orchestra her father hired for the occasion. Mozart brought along as his guest the celebrated Italian composer Giovanni Paisiello, whose newest hit, The Barber of Seville, had already made Figaro an operatic sensation before either Mozart or Rossini got the chance. Mozart himself took the keyboard part in his Quintet in E-flat for piano and winds—the work that directly precedes the concerto in his catalog—and, as an added attraction, joined Miss Ployer in his two-piano sonata, K. 448. The evening was an upscale entertainment heightened by great music. In the way that Mozart managed better than nearly any composer at any time, this music touches both connoisseur and dilettante alike—it's music of surpassing technical brilliance, but also, in Mozart's own words, "written in such a way that the less learned cannot fail to be pleased, though without knowing why."
The concerto is one of Mozart's finest, evidence that, even at the peak of his career as a virtuoso performer, he was as generous when writing for others as for himself. It was well received by the Ployers' guests, and its success quickly spread beyond the suburban enclave of Döbling. It's one of only six of Mozart's piano concertos which were published during his lifetime. Beethoven may well have picked up the unusual idea of a second theme that travels rapidly through several keys from the first movement of this concerto, since he does the same in his own piano concerto in this key. The entire opening Allegro, a particularly graceful rendering of the military march, is delicate in detail and bold in outline, with surprising dips into E-flat at important junctures.
Harmonic drama plays an even more influential role in the C major slow movement, where several powerful modulations and extensive chromaticism give weight to music of great transparency. This is music infinitely more complicated, more troubled than it at first seems. Even the opening statement from the piano swerves from major to minor, and from simple declamation to passionate outburst.
The finale is a set of variations on the tune the starling sang. The variations grow in complexity and ingenuity until the fourth, which plunges headlong into the minor mode, laden with chromaticism. The final variation, almost a cadenza, leads straight to a comic-opera finale, the official coda. Surely Paisiello, whose talent seldom ventured beyond the opera house, marveled that Mozart could afford to waste on the piano concerto a ready-made opera finale more brilliant than anything yet written for the stage. Mozart, of course, realized that the forms weren't mutually exclusive—the merger of the symphonic and the operatic styles is one of his greatest achievements—and that his well was far from dry—he was merely warming up for his own Figaro that, in just two years, would wipe Paisiello's from the stage.
A postscript about the starling. The bird lived with his master for three years (moving with the Mozarts first to the spacious apartment behind Saint Stephen's Cathedral where The Marriage of Figaro was composed and later to cheaper quarters in the Landstrasse), witnessing the birth of Carl Thomas, the couple's second son; Wolfgang's bout with a severe kidney infection; the historic night Haydn came to listen to string quartets dedicated to him; the birth, and death just a month later, of a third son; and observing, day and night, the greatest composer of the time working at top form. The starling died on June 4, 1787, inspiring in Mozart an elegy that begins, "A little fool lies here / Whom I held dear . . . ." Mozart then bought a canary that he kept in his room until a few hours before his own death.
--Phillip Huscher, program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

:)

North Star

Mahler
Symphony no. 5

Boulez & BBCSO, 1968

with a 7:43 Adagietto  8)
"Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it." - Confucius

My photographs on Flickr

Opus106

Quote from: Eric on May 27, 2012, 08:46:15 PM
I found (and decided to share) these interesting notes about the concerto No. 17, one of my favorite Mozart's piano concertos:

:)

Thank you, Antoine. :)
Regards,
Navneeth

Que

#109153


Picked up where I left off: disc 15 with the conclusion of the Leipzig Chorales. Olivier Vernet is playing the two  Silbermann organs of the Dom in Freiberg.



Q

val

BEETHOVEN:         String Trios opus 9                 /  Trio Zimmermann   (2011)

Three great works in a splendid interpretation. I had never heard this trio, with Frank Peter Zimmermann, but it is remarkable. I would like to listen to them in Schönberg's Trio opus 45.

pi2000

 L'Archibudelli -Beethoven
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:-*

Sergeant Rock

Pettersson Violin Concerto #2, Ida Haendel, violin, Blomstedt conducting the Swedish RSO




Sarge
the phone rings and somebody says,
"hey, they made a movie about
Mahler, you ought to go see it.
he was as f*cked-up as you are."
                               --Charles Bukowski, "Mahler"

mc ukrneal

Now listening to the Spirit of England, and enjoying it quite a bit...
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Be kind to your fellow posters!!

Sergeant Rock

Haydn String Quartet F minor op.20/5 played by the Jerusalem Quartet




Sarge
the phone rings and somebody says,
"hey, they made a movie about
Mahler, you ought to go see it.
he was as f*cked-up as you are."
                               --Charles Bukowski, "Mahler"

mc ukrneal

Have moved on to Foulds, Orchestral Music Volume 1 on Dutton.
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Be kind to your fellow posters!!