I would rarely put on a CD of a symphony these days, preferring to leave it to the vagaries of broadcast performances. For home listening, I turn increasingly to the string quartets (the piano music has always been there). I left it until relatively late in life to really get into the SQs - recently bought my 3rd complete set, by the Belceas, and am contemplating a 4th. Listening at home, the 3rd movement of Op 132 akin to Zen meditation, inducing a trance-like state. The piano music - I never cease to be amazed by the profundities of the Op 126 Bagatelles. Bernard Roberts talked during a recital about how much of them, and indeed other sections of Beethoven's late piano music, takes place at the extremes of the keyboard. His was the first complete set of the sonatas I bought. The Diabellis have always fascinated me, since sitting in the front row of a recital in 1969 consisting of the Waldstein (with Andante Favori as slow movement) followed by the Diabelli....several versions, starting with Brendel's on a Turnabout LP which I bought nearly 50 years ago and which is still playing well (since joined by others, most recently Paul Lewis's fine version). I always find something new in the Diabellis.
Beethoven, Ludwig van that ilk (1770 - 1827)
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Richard Tarleton
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Originally posted by Stanley Stewart View PostI find it refreshing to revisit an original off-air 2003 video, later transferred to DVD,
Eroica, a re-enactment of the events surrounding the composition of Beethoven's
Symphony No 3. Set against the revolutionary climate of the 19th century, the 91mins documentary charts the composer's struggle to cope with the gradual loss of his hearing,
and explores his almost inexhaustible passion for music.
A first rate cast, Ian Hart as Beethoven, Jack Davenport, Prince Lobkowitz and a superb vignette from Frank Finlay, Joseph Haydn, earnestly listening to a complete performance before seizing his moment as he departs, "Everything is different from today". Orchestre Revolutionaire/
John Eliot Gardiner. Writer, Nick Dear, Director, Simon Cellan Jones.
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The piano concertos were my introduction to Beethoven together with the fifth and sixth symphonies plus a LP of Alfred Brendel playing the Moonlight . Pathetique and Appassionata .
I have never come across a work of his that I didn't at least like - Barenboim and Klemperer in the Emperor, Perlman and Giulini in the Violin Concerto , Erich Kleiber and the VPO in the Eroica , Bruggen in the Fourth Symphony, the Quartetto Italiano , Annie Fischer and Fricsay in the Third Piano Concerto , Solomon in anything , the live Klemperer Fidelio , the Philharmonia Furtwangler Ninth from 1954, the 1960s Karajan symphony cycle , Brendel , Kempff , Lewis and Barenboim in the Piano Sonatas , Callas singing Ah Perfido …. there is no end .
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I have a soft spot for the Choral Fantasy, which seems to be regarded in some quarters as second rank Beethoven. I was pleased to hear a broadcast yesterday of the splendid recording by Tan and Norrington. What an original structure this piece has! It never fails to hold my attention throughout, at any rate in a good performance.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI have a soft spot for the Choral Fantasy, which seems to be regarded in some quarters as second rank Beethoven. I was pleased to hear a broadcast yesterday of the splendid recording by Tan and Norrington. What an original structure this piece has! It never fails to hold my attention throughout, at any rate in a good performance.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostOne of the first recordings I ever bought was the Gibson/Lill/(R)SNO on CfP and I played it to distraction! A piece I'm very fond of.
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Originally posted by greenilex View PostAs a former teacher of hearing impaired students, I am very interested in deafness and creativity.
LvB became more creative as his impairment progressed...or am I wrong?
Sand in the oyster?
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI still have the 'Beethoven Experience', the BBC's first 'Total Immersion project when there was a week of Beethoven's music 24 hours a day. ALL of which I recorded on mini-disc. One day, I'm going to find the time to listen to it.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI have a soft spot for the Choral Fantasy, which seems to be regarded in some quarters as second rank Beethoven. I was pleased to hear a broadcast yesterday of the splendid recording by Tan and Norrington. What an original structure this piece has! It never fails to hold my attention throughout, at any rate in a good performance.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMany thanks for starting the Beethoven Thread, anton - the sheer scale of the project has always cowed me! He'll need a sub-Forum all to himself, I'm sure - to be continued ...
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