Hello. New member with a question.
The box set of Beethoven's piano concertos by Robert Levin and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique contains chamber arrangements of both the fourth piano concerto and the second symphony. (These were also released on a separate CD on Archiv Blue, I believe). The liner notes and some internet research suggest that chamber arrangements were not uncommon during the time of Beethoven in order to broaden the audience for the music and to accomodate smaller but more numerous chamber groups.
However, other than the Levin version of the second, I have not seen many recorded versions of Beethoven's symphonies in chamber arrangements. (I've seen reference to a chamber version of the fifth by Pro Arte Antiqua Praha, but it does not seem to be available in the US.) Hearing familiar works performed in this manner is intriguing.
Does anyone know more about this "chamber arrangement" practice? And are there more such recordings available, particularly on period instruments?
The box set of Beethoven's piano concertos by Robert Levin and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique contains chamber arrangements of both the fourth piano concerto and the second symphony. (These were also released on a separate CD on Archiv Blue, I believe). The liner notes and some internet research suggest that chamber arrangements were not uncommon during the time of Beethoven in order to broaden the audience for the music and to accomodate smaller but more numerous chamber groups.
However, other than the Levin version of the second, I have not seen many recorded versions of Beethoven's symphonies in chamber arrangements. (I've seen reference to a chamber version of the fifth by Pro Arte Antiqua Praha, but it does not seem to be available in the US.) Hearing familiar works performed in this manner is intriguing.
Does anyone know more about this "chamber arrangement" practice? And are there more such recordings available, particularly on period instruments?
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