Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Sonate pour piano n° 1 en do majeur Vidéos
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2024-03-22
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Peter Rösel Bartholdy Debussy Johannes Brahms Beethoven Tschaikowsky Chopin Prokofjew Ravel 2007
Provided to YouTube by Kontor New Media Piano Sonata No. 1 in C Major, op. 1: Andante · Peter Rösel Bartholdy, Debussy, Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, Tschaikowsky, Chopin, Prokofjew, Ravel, Albeniz: Natural reflections ℗ edel classics GmbH Released on: 2007-09-21 Composer: Johannes Brahms Music Publisher: Manuskript Auto-generated by YouTube.
Johannes Brahms Peter Rösel Robert Schumann Mozart Liszt Berlioz Chopin 1833 1852 1853 1897 1974
- Composer: Johannes Brahms (7 May 1833 / 3 April 1897) - Performer: Peter Rösel - Year of recording: 1974 Piano Sonata No. 1 in C major, Op. 1, written in 1852-1853. 00:00 - I. Allegro 08:02 - II. Andante (nach einem altdeutschen Minneliede) 13:16 - III. Allegro molto e con fuoco / Più mosso 17:58 - IV. Allegro con fuoco / Presto non troppo ed agitato On 30 September 1853, the 20-year-old Brahms played a number of his keyboard works for Robert Schumann. Among these were both the First and Second Piano Sonatas, which Schumann hailed as "veiled symphonies." Although published as Op. 1, the Sonata No. 1 in C major is actually the fourth piano sonata Brahms is known to have composed; the third was published as Op. 2, and the first two were evidently destroyed (partly because Brahms was called 'The New Mozart' after music critics had heard them). The enormous scale and breadth of this sonata were probably what Schumann had in mind in drawing his symphonic analogy. Cast in four long movements, the Sonata No. 1 is a remarkably cohesive and effective work for so young and inexperienced a composer. Aside from the sonata's scope, another feature that Schumann might have found particularly attractive is the folk flavor of the Andante second movement, a set of variations on what Brahms believed to be an old German minnelied. (The authenticity of the song has since been brought into question.) Schumann was also almost certainly struck by Brahms' early mastery of large-scale sonata form, a particular concern of Schumann's throughout his own compositional career. The first movement is in a fairly conventional sonata-allegro form, but uses the technique of thematic transformation pioneered by Liszt and Berlioz. Here, the movement's main themes are altered in character and rhythm as the music proceeds, as opposed to a Classical fragmentation and recombination of motives. The following movement is a Beethovenian scherzo based on a motive from the final bars of the Andante, a derivation that creates a sense of union between the central movements. This technique is continued in the Rondo finale, whose opening is derived from a transformation of material from the first movement. In this sonata Brahms foreshadows many of the characteristics of his mature piano works, including formal mastery, thematic development and transformation, and a distinctive if somewhat thick virtuoso keyboard scoring that owes surprisingly little to Liszt and Chopin. The sonata is dedicated to Joseph Joachim.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Zips 1774
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano Sonata No. 1 in C major, K 279 (189d) (1774) is a sonata in three movements. It was composed when Mozart was only 18 years old. 1. Allegro 2. Andante 3. Allegro The opening Allegro features smooth thematic material, sometimes based on sharp dynamic contrasts, with a short development (only eighteen bars long). The development sections of the remaining two movements are much more substantial. The Andante is full of expressive shading, in large measure the result of Mozart's harmonic freedom. Some of that same freedom characterizes the concluding Allegro, which zips along in its 2/4 meter. This features an unusually active part for the left hand, another extended development section, and a surprising close: Mozart rounds the sonata off with two firm chords, which he marks Coda. A typical performance takes about 14 minutes. The work was written down, except for the first part of the opening movement, during the visit Mozart paid to Munich for the production of La finta giardiniera from late 1774 to the beginning of the following March. / FREE .mp3 and .wav files of all Mozart's music at: (http•••) FREE sheet music scores of any Mozart piece at: (http•••) ALSO check out these cool sites: (http•••) and (http•••) / NOTE: I do not know who the performers of this are, nor the place and date of recording!!! Any suggestions are welcome. / ENJOY!!!! :D
Mozart Robert Veyron Lacroix Lacroix Pleyel Mage 1957
Dédié au Vieux Mage ! Pleyel SOund is always perfect for Mozart ! 0:00 : Piano Sonata No.1 in C major, K.279/189d - I. Allegro 3:31 : II. Andante 7:16 : III. Allegro 9:42 : Piano Sonata No.13 in B-flat major, K.333/315c - I. Allegro 14:48 : II. Andante cantabile 19:41 : III. Allegretto grazioso 22:54 : Piano Sonata No.14 in C minor, K.457 - I. I. Allegro 30:17 : II. Adagio 37:41 : III. Molto allegro
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