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  1. Dec 29, 2020 · In 1806, Beethoven wrote his Violin Concerto in D major, op. 61. In 1807, he took the work that was clearly more pianistic than violinistic and rewrote it for piano as Op. 61a. Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Concerto in D Major, Op. 61a – III. Rondo (Daniel Barenboim, piano; English Chamber Orchestra; Daniel Barenboim, cond.)

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    Complete String Quartets

    Quartetto Italiano Decca Overall, these performances still strike a finely judged balance between beauty and truth, and are ultimately more satisfying and searching than most of their rivals... Read the review

    String Quartets, Vols 1-3

    Takács Quartet Decca More probing than the pristine Emersons or Alban Bergs (live), more refined than the gutsy and persuasive Lindsays, and less consciously stylised than the Juilliards (and always with the historic Busch Quartet as an essential reference) – at no point did I feel the Takács significantly wanting. They do Beethoven proud and no one could reasonably ask for more. Rob Cowan(May 2005)

    String Quartets, Op 18

    Tokyo Quartet Harmonia Mundi Few ensembles have characterised the A major’s cantering first idea as happily as the Tokyos do here, while the ethereal and texturally variegated middle movements anticipate the very different world of Beethoven’s “late” quartets. Beautifully blended recordings, too: if you’re after a top-ranking digital set of Op 18, you couldn’t do better... Read the review

    Complete Piano Sonatas

    Igor Levit pf Sony Classical A highlight is theWaldstein, the repeated C major left-hand chords underpinning a tensile energy that runs through the entire opening movement. But it’s not about momentum: Levit colours and shapes it with such finesse – withdrawing the sound to a whisper and then building to a great billowing wave. TheAdagio moltois remarkable in the way he stills the mood, conjuring an atmosphere that sounds almost like a postscript to Schubert’sWinterreise. As the music gradual...

    Songs

    Stephen Genz bar Roger Vignoles pf Hyperion The 26-year-old Erfurt-born baritone Stephan Genz is in the first bloom of his youthful prime. His Schumann Liederkreis, Op 24 (5/98) was the first recording to give serious warning of the distinctive lyric ardour and keen intelligence of his artistry; and now Beethoven’s setting of Goethe’s ‘Mailied’ (Op 52 No 4), with its lightly breathed, springing words, could have been written with Genz in mind... Read the full review in the Reviews Database

    Choral Fantasia. Triple Concerto. Rondo for Piano & Orchestra

    Pierre-Laurent Aimard pf Thomas Zehetmair vn Clemens Hagen vc Chamber Orchestra of Europe; Arnold Schoenberg Choir / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Warner Classics Listening to the opening tutti on this joyful new Triple Concerto, I could just picture Nikolaus Harnoncourt cueing his strings, perched slightly forwards, impatiently waiting for that first, pregnant forte. This is a big, affable, blustery Triple, the soloists completing the sound canvas rather than dominating it, a genuine collaborative ef...

    Missa Solemnis

    Laura Aikin sopElisabeth Kulman mezJohannes Chum tenRuben Drole bass-barArnold Schoenberg Choir; Concentus Musicus Wien / Nikolaus Harnoncourt Sony Classical This is a remarkable account of Beethoven’s Missa solemnisand, in one important respect, an unusual one. For though it is in no sense lacking in drama, it is in essence a deeply devotional reading. And aptly so. ‘Mit Andacht’ – ‘with devotion’ – Beethoven writes time and again during the course of the work. Where many of the Mass’s most...

    Fidelio

    Stemme; Kaufmann; Lucerne Festival Orchestra / Claudio Abbado Decca It was Abbado’s second Berlin Philharmonic symphony cycle from 2001 which thrust him more or less unexpectedly into the ranks of the immortals where Beethoven is concerned. And it was seven years after that, in Reggio Emilia in 2008, that he conducted his first Fidelio. Like Furtwängler in his 1953 studio recording, Abbado leads a viscerally charged performance that flies to the very heart of the matter, and does so in a vers...

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  2. Ranking the Beethoven Piano Concertos. Last time we were ranking the symphonies. This time, we're on it with the piano concertos. Drop your list below and if possible, mention what it is about the concerto that made you place it there. My list: Number 1 in C - I love the first movement. Third movement so much but the theme in particular the ...

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  4. Naxos 8.110638-40. Beethoven composed several concertos during his teens – the piano score of a complete concerto in E flat dating from 1784 is the only one to have survived. But it is the five piano concertos he wrote between 1795 and 1809 that have been beloved by pianists and audiences alike for over 200 years.

  5. Dive into the world of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1, unraveling its history, structure, and enduring impact on classical music.

  6. Jan 8, 2020 · Categories Classical Period, Concerto, Solo Keyboard, Twentieth Century, Uncategorized Tags Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, Beethoven, Beethoven Piano Concerto 1, Chopin, Debussy, Images, Mazurka No. 45 in G Minor Op. 67, Rachmaninov, Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 4 in G minor Op. 40, Ravel, Ravel Piano Concerto in G Major, Reflets dans l'eau

  7. Ludwig van Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 1 in C major, Op. 15, was written in 1795, then revised in 1800. It was possibly first performed by Beethoven at his first public concert in Vienna on 29 March 1795.

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