Originally posted by Philip
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
In Search of Beethoven (Phil Grabsky's blog)
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by PhilipSurely not so close to the "male menopause", are we? Yes, delusion strikes me as the apt word (for me, too!).
Anyway, enough of this sentimentality! More importantly, the Strasbourg "Musica" Contemporary Music Festival is up and running. I've been to two concerts so far. Anyone care to hear what, and my impressions?
Don't all speak at once, please.
Anyone see/hear the Prom? It was broadcast on the radio here, but I only caught a small part of it. (Although, I am not sure if it was a delayed/recorded broadcast.)
Comment
-
Originally posted by PhilipSurely not so close to the "male menopause", are we? Yes, delusion strikes me as the apt word (for me, too!).
Anyway, enough of this sentimentality! More importantly, the Strasbourg "Musica" Contemporary Music Festival is up and running. I've been to two concerts so far. Anyone care to hear what, and my impressions?
Don't all speak at once, please.'Man know thyself'
Comment
-
In the documentary, Ronald Brautigam demonstrated how difficult it was to play portions of Beethoven's very early work, Piano Concerto in E flat, WoO4.
This news item is interesting:
Published Date: 06 October 2009
By ALEXANDER BRYCE
CLASSICAL
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Piano Concertos WoO4 and No 2
*****
BIS SACD179, £12.72
Dutch pianist Ronald Brautigam attempts a reconstruction of Beethoven's Piano Concerto WoO4, possibly completed by 1784, when Beethoven was only 14. Even at that age Beethoven was a prodigious pianist, judging by the manuscript copy of the piano part, which is all that survives. Brautigam's reconstruction is carefully thought through, historically informed and contains much delightfully youthful music.
The Second Piano Concerto, begun around 1787, was reworked repeatedly before Beethoven published it: the result is classical in form, yet shaped by Beethoven's continuing musical development. Both receive strong performances from Brautigam and Andrew Parrott with the Norrköping Symphony.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Michael View PostIn the documentary, Ronald Brautigam demonstrated how difficult it was to play portions of Beethoven's very early work, Piano Concerto in E flat, WoO4.
This news item is interesting:
Published Date: 06 October 2009
By ALEXANDER BRYCE
CLASSICAL
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Piano Concertos WoO4 and No 2
*****
BIS SACD179, £12.72
Dutch pianist Ronald Brautigam attempts a reconstruction of Beethoven's Piano Concerto WoO4, possibly completed by 1784, when Beethoven was only 14. Even at that age Beethoven was a prodigious pianist, judging by the manuscript copy of the piano part, which is all that survives. Brautigam's reconstruction is carefully thought through, historically informed and contains much delightfully youthful music.
The Second Piano Concerto, begun around 1787, was reworked repeatedly before Beethoven published it: the result is classical in form, yet shaped by Beethoven's continuing musical development. Both receive strong performances from Brautigam and Andrew Parrott with the Norrköping Symphony.
And of course a familiar face in the comments.
Comment
-
Originally posted by hal9000 View PostOh good, it's on Youtube. It's not all bad, Albert.
Comment
Comment