Mostrando postagens com marcador Berlioz. Mostrar todas as postagens


The Symphonie Fantastique was initially composed in 1830 and first performed in December of the same year under the direction of Habeneck. Berlioz however revised the work extensively during his trip to Italy in 1831-2 and in subsequent years and did not publish it until 1845. The work as we now know it is thus substantially different from the original of 1830, which can no longer be reconstructed in full detail.

The Symphonie Fantastique has always been the work with which Berlioz’s name is most closely associated. The composition of this revolutionary masterpiece marked a breakthrough in the composer’s career, at once the culmination of his years of apprenticeship, and the starting point of his mature work as a symphonic composer. The impact that Beethoven had on Berlioz is evident in the work, but no less evident is Berlioz’s originality in opening up new paths that Beethoven had not explored, and the sound world of Berlioz is entirely his own.
The programme on which the symphony was initially based went through a number of changes between 1830 and 1855. It does not need to be repeated at length here. Under the influence of opium (in the 1855 version), a young and sensitive artist (Berlioz himself), experiences a series of visions – the different movements of the symphony – in which his beloved figures as a theme, the idée fixe, which recurs in every movement, though each time in a different form (cf. the Memoirs chapter 45 in relation to Harold in Italy). The theme had already been used by Berlioz in his cantata Herminie written for the Prix de Rome of 1828 (H 29), though it is much more fully developed in the symphony than in the cantata. ...

Berlioz



Symphonie Fantastique


The London Classical Players
Roger Norrington, conductor

Recorded: III.1998,
nr.1 Studio, Abbey Road, London




Quality: mp3, varied kbps
Size: 93 MB


... In this effort Berlioz, Liszt and Wagner not only composed the grand-scale works for which they are best known, but they each devoted energy at varying points in their careers to the art of song. For Berlioz and Wagner composing for voice and piano occupied their youthful careers and constituted only a fraction of their total output, while for Liszt his eight-four songs represent a more significant body of vocal composition. Yet, however atypical Wagner's early "curiosities" or Berlioz's unorchestrated songs are, they are important documents which reveal the development of each composer's musical language and thematic material. All three, for example, relied on contemporary poetic inspiration, drawing texts from major writers like Hugo, Heine, Musset, Moore and Tennyson as well as minor ones like Reboul, Rellstab and Scheurlin, just as they returned to the great lyric voices of the past like Goethe and Schiller. All three recognized the noble marriage of music and poetry, and all three were influenced by the dual forces of the evolving German Ballade and Lied, as passed down from Schubert, Schumann, Franz or Loewe, and of the developing French mélodie derived from the older romance tradition and enriched by the influence of heightened folksong such as Thomas Moore's Irish Melodies. ...

Thomas Hampson and 
Carla Maria Verdino-Süllwold



Berlioz, Liszt, Wagner

Romantische Lieder
(Romantic Songs)

Thomas Hampson, baritone
Geoffrey Parsons, piano



Quality: mp3, varied kbps
Size: 113 MB

Early Romantic Overtures

Contents:

01. Weber - Oberon
02. Mendelssohn - Die Hebriden, Op. 26
03. Berlioz - Les Francs Juges, Op. 3
04. Schumann - Genoveva, Op. 81
05. Schubert - Die Zauberharfe
06. Wagner - Der fliegende Holländer
(original version, 1841)


The London Classical Players,
Roger Norrington


DL Early Romantic Overtures

Quality: mp3, 192 kbps
Size: 88 MB

You are visitor nr.

Estadisticas y contadores web gratis
Estadisticas Gratis

Visitors around the world

Followers

Warning!

The prime propose of this Blog is offer some musical material for research and knowledge of composers, works and performers. We DO NOT understand that the medium quality mp3 files are substitutes to actual Compact Discs recordings. We strongly recomend: buy your original CD (try the amazing Amazon site) and enjoy a superior audio quality with the almost always constructive informations of the Booklets.