Originally posted by Roehre
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Brahms ... inexplicable innit
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Roehre
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI've just listened on YouTube (E Power Biggs + L. Bernstein are suitably pompous). Not a work I will return to that often. I kept thinking of Parry's "I Was Glad" (which actually came first).
I stick to the Brahms original, which is an impressive piece by any means ( I prefer the sextet version)
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[QUOTEthe wonderful Clarinet Quintet, or the Horn Trio.[/QUOTE]
The sad beauty of the opening of the Horn trio strikes me as being "as good as it gets", pretty much. The trio benefits from being less frequently heard (I think) than the Clarinet Quintet, which, unfortunately for some of us, was a firm favourite of the examining boards as an A level "set work" in the 1970s!
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostBy coincidence, we went to an excellent Imogen Cooper solo recital in Reading Concert Hall last night which included Schubert D960 and Schumann's First Sonata. One of the other items was his arrangement of the Op 18 Andante. I did not previously know it existed (done for Clara, of course) and notice that she included it on a recent Chandos disc.
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Tom Service on Brahms 4th Symphony in his Graun blog - good essay imhoAccording to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostTom Service on Brahms 4th Symphony in his Graun blog - good essay imho
This symphony might a reliable and over-familiar staple on concert programmes, but listen to it with fresh ears.
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Roehre
Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostTom Service on Brahms 4th Symphony in his Graun blog - good essay imho
Thanks aCDJ
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostTom Service on Brahms 4th Symphony in his Graun blog - good essay imho
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This seems to me to represent a massive improvement in the quality of Service provided, compared to some of that to which his readers and listeners have become accustomed - really insightful in many ways; I recall (though I cannot now find the interview text in which it originated) that Elliott Carter one claimed that "the most radical work an American composer could write would be one like Brahms’s Fourth Symphony, which assumed the most highly developed musical culture in its listeners"...
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Originally posted by aka Calum Da Jazbo View PostTom Service on Brahms 4th Symphony in his Graun blog - good essay imho
I dug out my Klemperer/Philharmonia Orchestra 4th which, combined with Legge's recording production skills, makes for an exhilirating listen.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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amateur51
Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostI enjoyed this piece, too. Service writes with more lucidity than he presents (or interviews).
I dug out my Klemperer/Philharmonia Orchestra 4th which, combined with Legge's recording production skills, makes for an exhilirating listen.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostThis the one you were listening to only yesterday afternoon over on the Bargains thread, Throppers?It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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