1500
Building a Library
Nigel Simeone chooses his favourite version of Brahms' 3rd Symphony in F major, Op. 90.
The work was written in the summer of 1883 at Wiesbaden, nearly six years after he completed his Symphony No. 2. In the meantime, Brahms had written some of his greatest works, including the Violin Concerto, two overtures (Tragic Overture and Academic Festival Overture), and Piano Concerto No. 2. The first movement begins with a musical theme that spells the notes F-A♭-F which is thought to represent Brahms' personal motto, frei aber froh (free but happy). He had first developed this motto many years earlier in response to Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim, who himself had already adopted a personal motto F-A-E, frei aber einsam (free but lonely). The influential music critic Eduard Hanslick said, "Many music lovers will prefer the titanic force of the First Symphony; others, the untroubled charm of the Second, but the Third strikes me as being artistically the most nearly perfect."
Another appearance by Nigel/makropulos!
Listings in some form or other to follow.
PS
EEK!
399 entries in Presto listings here:
150 on CD (might be duplications if in box sets):
14 on SACD:
9 as Presto CDs:
323 as downloads:
13 as Super Hi-res downloads:
30 as Award winners (I have found in the past that this Presto flag is not necessarily for the piece in question; it might be for the coupling etc):
Feedback welcome as to how useful this breakdown is or any suggestions on how to compile anything sensible.
Maybe, as suggested in the 'Where do we go from here?' thread, we start our own list of favourites.
We could perhaps experiment with a listing (with member's name associated?).
I think I'd be able to achieve that by copy/paste from contributions.
Building a Library
Nigel Simeone chooses his favourite version of Brahms' 3rd Symphony in F major, Op. 90.
The work was written in the summer of 1883 at Wiesbaden, nearly six years after he completed his Symphony No. 2. In the meantime, Brahms had written some of his greatest works, including the Violin Concerto, two overtures (Tragic Overture and Academic Festival Overture), and Piano Concerto No. 2. The first movement begins with a musical theme that spells the notes F-A♭-F which is thought to represent Brahms' personal motto, frei aber froh (free but happy). He had first developed this motto many years earlier in response to Hungarian violinist Joseph Joachim, who himself had already adopted a personal motto F-A-E, frei aber einsam (free but lonely). The influential music critic Eduard Hanslick said, "Many music lovers will prefer the titanic force of the First Symphony; others, the untroubled charm of the Second, but the Third strikes me as being artistically the most nearly perfect."
Another appearance by Nigel/makropulos!
Listings in some form or other to follow.
PS
EEK!
399 entries in Presto listings here:
150 on CD (might be duplications if in box sets):
14 on SACD:
9 as Presto CDs:
323 as downloads:
13 as Super Hi-res downloads:
30 as Award winners (I have found in the past that this Presto flag is not necessarily for the piece in question; it might be for the coupling etc):
Feedback welcome as to how useful this breakdown is or any suggestions on how to compile anything sensible.
Maybe, as suggested in the 'Where do we go from here?' thread, we start our own list of favourites.
We could perhaps experiment with a listing (with member's name associated?).
I think I'd be able to achieve that by copy/paste from contributions.
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