At this especially important time in the calender for Beethovenians, I thought it appropriate to upload some mp3's of rare Beethoven music related to matters of death.
First there are the 3 Equali for 4 trombones WoO30 (1812), this is real funeral music. The tracks come from an excellent cd 'Beethoven - Complete Music for Winds and Brass Vol.2' by Ottetto Italiano on the Arts Label (Arts 47551-2):
Equali1.mp3, Equali2.mp3, Equali3.mp3
Then there is the elegaic song 'Sanft wie du lebtest' op112, composed in 1814 for vocal and string quartett (then revised for larger forces) to commemorate the death in childbirth of Eleonore von Pasqualati in 1811. The anonymous words are simple and poignant, and brought what can be considered as the first true '3rd' period work out of the Master:
"Tender as thou lived,
So thou died,
Too holy for sorrow!
No eye can weep
At the homecomming of a heavenly soul."
op112.mp3
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
[This message has been edited by Rod (edited 03-27-2001).]
First there are the 3 Equali for 4 trombones WoO30 (1812), this is real funeral music. The tracks come from an excellent cd 'Beethoven - Complete Music for Winds and Brass Vol.2' by Ottetto Italiano on the Arts Label (Arts 47551-2):
Equali1.mp3, Equali2.mp3, Equali3.mp3
Then there is the elegaic song 'Sanft wie du lebtest' op112, composed in 1814 for vocal and string quartett (then revised for larger forces) to commemorate the death in childbirth of Eleonore von Pasqualati in 1811. The anonymous words are simple and poignant, and brought what can be considered as the first true '3rd' period work out of the Master:
"Tender as thou lived,
So thou died,
Too holy for sorrow!
No eye can weep
At the homecomming of a heavenly soul."
op112.mp3
------------------
"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
[This message has been edited by Rod (edited 03-27-2001).]
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