Richard Strauss Concierto par trompa n.° 2 en mi bemol mayor Vídeos
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Rudolf Kempe Richard Strauss 1976 2013
Provided to YouTube by Warner Classics Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major: I. Allegro · Peter Damm · Rudolf Kempe Strauss, R: Horn Concertos ℗ 1976 Parlophone Records Limited. Remastered (p) 2013 Parlophone Records Limited, a Warner Music Group Company Producer: David Mottley Horn: Peter Damm Conductor: Rudolf Kempe Orchestra: Staatskapelle Dresden Composer: Richard Strauss Auto-generated by YouTube.
Rudolf Kempe Richard Strauss 1976 2013
Provided to YouTube by Warner Classics Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major: II. Andante con moto · Peter Damm · Rudolf Kempe Strauss, R: Horn Concertos ℗ 1976 Parlophone Records Limited. Remastered (p) 2013 Parlophone Records Limited, a Warner Music Group Company Producer: David Mottley Horn: Peter Damm Conductor: Rudolf Kempe Orchestra: Staatskapelle Dresden Composer: Richard Strauss Auto-generated by YouTube.
Richard Strauss Hauptmann Herbert Karajan Dennis Brain Schirach Karl Böhm Karl Elmendorff Wolfgang Sawallisch Eleazar Carvalho David Pyatt Salzburg Festival Tanglewood Vienna Philharmonic Philharmonia Orchestra Boston Symphony Orchestra 1883 1900 1941 1942 1943 1944 1948 1950 1972 1973 1988 2016
00:00 1. Allegro 09:02 2. Andante con moto 14:39 3. Rondo: Allegro molto Horn: Norbert Hauptmann Berlin Philharmoniker Herbert von Karajan (1973 DG) The concerto is written in a conservative style that looks back to the musical world of his teenage years as represented by his first horn concerto, which was completed in 1883. Strauss follows the typical fast-slow-fast structure of classical concerti, with the three movements in E-flat major, A-flat major, and E-flat major. Richard Strauss composed his Horn Concerto No.2 in E-flat major (TrV 283) whilst living in Vienna in 1942. The work was premiered in 1943 at the Salzburg Festival and was recorded in 1944, both with solo horn Gottfried von Freiberg. The score was published by Boosey & Hawkes of London in 1950. It was taken up and popularised by the British horn player Dennis Brain. It has since become the most performed and recorded horn concerto of the 20th century. Composition history: The premiere of Strauss's opera Capriccio was on 28 October 1942. Strauss wrote "My life's work has been concluded with Capriccio. Whatever notes I scribble down now have no bearing on musical history." A couple of days later he drove to Vienna where he was to stay for over 6 months. The horn concerto seems to have been written very quickly: his note book indicates that the draft was finished on 11 November, and the final score two weeks later on the 28th (he added a note at the end "In the beautiful house at Vienna). The autograph score indicates that it is dedicated "To the memory of my father", although this did not make it into the published version. The speed of composition may reflect it had been on his mind for sometime, as the principal horn player at Munich, Professor Josef Suttner, had asked him years before to write a second concerto. Strauss also mentioned the second concerto in a program list written in 1941. The Strauss family was not in a good place in late 1942. His wife Pauline had developed problems with her sight, whilst Richard developed serious influenza. The safety of his Jewish daughter-in-law Alice and grandchildren remained precarious: part of the reason for staying in Vienna was the protection provided by the Nazi governor of Vienna, Baldur von Schirach, who was a great admirer of Strauss and his music. The mass deportations of Jews started in 1941. In the summer of 1942 Strauss had become involved in the unsuccessful attempts of his son Franz and Alice to help her relatives emigrate to Switzerland. Strauss himself visited the Theresienstadt concentration camp where he greeted the SS guards with the words "I am the composer Richard Strauss" and was duly sent away without being able to see Alice's relatives who were incarcerated there (26 of Alice's Jewish relatives were to die before the end of the war). Norman Del Mar wrote in 1972: "It is indeed hard to believe that this is the work of a depressed old man living in fear of disgrace from the authorities of a war-beleaguered country, so light and carefree a style did he capture" Clearly, composing provided an escape from the uncertainty and horrors unfolding around him. It also reflected his aesthetic that art and culture were the highest human achievement that transcended history. In 1900 he had set Uhland's song "Des Dichters Abendgang" (The poets evening stroll) which expressed this view that "When the dark clouds roll down..You carry within yourself the blessing of song. The light, that you saw there, Gently shines upon you on the dark paths. Performance history: The premier was given at the Salzburg Festival on 11 August 1943 with the horn player Gottfried von Freiberg as the soloist and Karl Böhm conducting the Vienna Philharmonic. The same combination recorded it soon after. Richard Strauss himself was not present at the premiere, but had been at the festival earlier and left on 9 August after conducting some all-Mozart concerts to return home to Garmisch. He had, however, worked with Böhm and Gottfried during his stay: the signed autograph manuscript used for the premiere is dated August 8. The concerto was played a second time on 26 May 1944, with the horn played by Max Zimolong and Karl Elmendorff conducting the Staatskapelle Dresden. British horn player Dennis Brain performed it with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1948, later recording it with the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch. The US premiere was given on 8 October 1948 with soloist Anthony Miranda and the Little Orchestra of New York conducted by Thomas Sherman, and a year later at the Tanglewood with James Stagliano on horn and the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eleazar de Carvalho. The concerto went on to become the most performed of 20th-century horn concertos (it was performed twice in the finals of the BBC Young Musician competition, in 1988 by the winner David Pyatt and in 2016 by runner-up Ben Goldscheider). (http•••)
Richard Strauss Sebastian Weigle Frankfurt Radio Symphony 2020
Provided to YouTube by NAXOS of America Horn Concerto No. 2 in E-Flat Major, TrV 283: I. Allegro · Samuel Seidenberg Franz & Richard Strauss: Horn Concertos ℗ 2020 Pan Classics Released on: 2020-07-17 Orchestra: Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra Artist: Samuel Seidenberg Conductor: Sebastian Weigle Composer: Richard Strauss Auto-generated by YouTube.
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