Franz Joseph HaydnThis interpretation is out of the race of comparison between less or more...
String Quartet Op. 71
The Griller String Quartet
Vanguard Classics
Heartfelt and moving....
Classical Music for Aficionados
Franz Joseph Haydn Symphony No. 101 in D major "The Clock" Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra Nikolaus Harnoncourt Warner Classics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wVTtkArkqo From the notes: ..."At most he could be called the Father (though not the inventor) of the classical symphony, who paved the way for Mozart and Beethoven. ...We need to remember that Haydn was already twenty seven when George Frideric Handel died in 1759 -- the same year that Haydn composed his first symphony. And when Haydn died in 1809, Mozart had already been in his grave for nearly twenty years. Beethoven completed his sixth symphony in the year of Haydn’s death, and Schubert would compose his first symphony four years later." I just love the factoids. Remembering the chronological order in classical music is tough. Cheers |
For a long time I have listened to the various Requiem’s of the Great One’s during Lent. Till last year I did not even know that Dvorak had one and it come up to the best . I doubt if anyone will listen to a 90 minute Religious Masterpiece , but if I’m wrong , this is the all Czech best one . Choirs are from Heaven as is the norm in the Musical Powerhouse that is this little land. https://youtu.be/I8OT2HVx23g?t=8 P.S . The only audiences with many young people eating up Classical I have seen are Prague and Budapest . |
Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major, Op. 58 - 3. Rondo. Vivace
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTRA8LqpDYc From the Notes: "The earliest ideals for this Concerto were jotted down in a sketchbook by Beethoven in early 1804. -- The work was performed for the first time, by Beethoven, in March 1807 at a private concert at the palace of Prince Lobkowitz -- The first public performance eventually took place on 22 December 1808, at a large benefit concert at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna. The concert was organized by Beethoven himself and consisted entirely of works of his not previously heard in public, including the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies and parts of the mass in C." Just think, if you were not at the concert, you just didn't hear this music. Cheers |