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Brahms – Symphony No.1

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Label
Catalogue numberBIS-1756 SACD
Release date2012-12-01
Discs1
Orig. sample rate44100Hz
Total time64:34

„CD der Woche“ 18/02/2013 MDR Figaro
Audiophiles Highlight des Monats, Stereo 06/2013
Empfehlung des Monats, Fono Forum 05/2013


A weighty symphony, swaying Viennese waltzes and fiery Hungarian dances make up the colourful programme when Thomas Dausgaard and his Swedish Chamber Orchestra engage with Johannes Brahms in Opening Doors, the team’s acclaimed series of Romantic orchestral composers. Johannes Brahms was only twenty years old when Robert Schumann hailed him as one whose genius gave rise to the greatest symphonic hopes. It is therefore striking that he didn’t complete his First Symphony until more than twenty years later, in 1876 – even though the earliest sketches for it date back to 1855. Brahms – who once said that he constantly heard the ‘giant’ Beethoven ‘marching behind him’ – had such a deep respect for what his great predecessor had achieved with the genre that he for a long time doubted that he would ever be able to write a symphony of his own – by the time he did, it must have been gratifying to him that it was hailed as ‘Beethoven’s Tenth’. While working on the symphony, Brahms composed his Op.52, the cycle Liebeslieder-Walzer ‘for piano four-hands (and song ad libitum)’. He kept the forces as flexible as possible: the waltzes were performable with or without voices; if used, the vocal parts could be sung either by soloists or by a choir. Even so, he was soon asked for another version, for choir and orchestra. Brahms initially rejected this idea, but finally agreed to make a partial orchestration: selecting eight of the Op.52 waltzes, he supplemented them with an early version of one of the not yet published Neue Liebeslieder-Walzer, Op.65. Around the same time, he was asked to orchestrate another collection of dances composed for piano four-hands: his first set of Hungarian Dances, which had quickly become a great hit. It took him four years to comply with this wish, and even then he only accepted to orchestrate three of the dances, leaving the field open for various other arrangers (including Dvořák) to satisfy the demand for more.
 
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$ 13.24
 
Extra material for download
 
 
  Composer: Brahms, Johannes
  Symphony No.1 in C minor, Op.68 (1876) 44:32
01 I. Un poco sostenuto – Allegro 15:04 $ 3.16 USD
02 II. Andante sostenuto 08:41 $ 1.82 USD
03 III. Un poco Allegretto e grazioso 04:34 $ 0.96 USD
04 IV. Adagio – Più Andante – Allegro non troppo, ma con
brio
16:13 $ 3.41 USD
 
  Liebeslieder-Walzer from Op.52 & Op.65 (1869–70) 11:35
05 I. Rede Mädchen, allzuliebes, Op.52 No.1 01:05 $ 0.23 USD
06 II. Am Gesteine rauscht die Flut, Op.52 00:42 $ 0.15 USD
07 III. Wie des Abends schöne Röte, Op.52 No.4 00:43 $ 0.15 USD
08 IV. Ein kleiner, hübscher Vogel nahm den Flug, Op.52 No.6 02:31 $ 0.53 USD
09 V. Die grüne Hopfenranke, Op.52 No.5 01:26 $ 0.30 USD
10 VI. Nagen am Herzen fühl ich Gift in mir, Op.65 No.9 01:11 $ 0.25 USD
11 VII. Nein, es ist nicht auszukommen, Op.52 No.11 00:52 $ 0.18 USD
12 VIII. Wenn so lind dein Auge mir, Op.52 No.8 01:23 $ 0.29 USD
13 IX. Am Donaustrande, da steht ein Haus, Op.52 No.9 01:42 $ 0.36 USD
 
  Hungarian Dances from WoO 1 (1869, orch. 1873) 06:57
14 No.1. Allegro molto 03:07 $ 0.65 USD
15 No.3. Allegretto 02:08 $ 0.45 USD
16 No.10. Presto 01:42 $ 0.36 USD
 
  Album total 64:34
ComposerBrahms, Johannes
ConductorDausgaard, Thomas
OrchestraSwedish Chamber Orchestra (Svenska Kammarorkestern)

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