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Vittorio Benaglia, Denitsa Laffchieva, Alexander Gordon - Bruch, Hindemith, Rota: Music for Viola and Orchestra (2022)

Vittorio Benaglia, Denitsa Laffchieva, Alexander Gordon - Bruch, Hindemith, Rota: Music for Viola and Orchestra (2022)
  • Title: Bruch, Hindemith, Rota: Music for Viola and Orchestra
  • Year Of Release: 2022
  • Label: Da Vinci Classics
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 52:35
  • Total Size: 225 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Concerto in E Minor, Op. 88: I. Andante con moto (For Clarinet, Viola, and Orchestra)
02. Concerto in E Minor, Op. 88: II. Allegro moderato (For Clarinet, Viola, and Orchestra)
03. Concerto in E Minor, Op. 88: III. Allegro molto (For Clarinet, Viola, and Orchestra)
04. Romanze, Op. 85 (For Viola and Orchestra)
05. Kol Nidrei, Op. 47 (For Viola and Orchestra)
06. Trauermusik: I. Langsam (For Viola and String Orchestra)
07. Trauermusik: II. Ruhig Bewegt (For Viola and String Orchestra)
08. Trauermusik: III. Lebhaft (For Viola and String Orchestra)
09. Trauermusik: IV. Choral 'Fur Deinen Thron Tret Ich Hiermit'. Sehr Iangsam (For Viola and String Orchestra)
10. Intermezzo (For Viola and String Orchestra)

Particularly in the German-speaking lands, the movement now known as Romanticism found its most genuine expression in music. Indeed, philosophers such as Hegel or Schopenhauer (to say nothing of Nietzsche) found a special place for music within their systems of thought; writers such as Wackenroder were able to build their entire worldview on a kind of religion of music; and the ubiquity of music in the daily life, in the social rites, and in the spiritual perspective of the era promoted the centrality of music throughout that period. Music was thought to be perfectly suited for the elusive and yet powerful expression of the individual’s feelings, of the relationship between humankind, nature, and the supernatural, and for the outpourings of the Romantic spirit. Rooted within the movement which first shook the composed refinement of Classicism, i.e. the Sturm und Drang, Romanticism and musical Romanticism presented themselves in the guise of several successive waves, constantly acquiring new features, but also progressively losing other traits. What can be defined as the “long Romanticism” thus encompassed little less than two centuries, if one considers the earliest beginnings and the last reminiscences (indeed, some traces of a Romantic philosophy, of a Romantic attitude to music and of a post-Romantic musical language are still clearly found in today’s post-modern world). Yet, generally speaking, the “death” of Romanticism cannot be dated later than World War I. By that time, the tonal language in which the Romantics had found their ideal expression had already been deeply challenged: from within, as in the case of Wagner, a quintessential Romantic who effectively destroyed the bridge behind him; or from without, as in the case of the Impressionists. Still, if Wagner is the champion of the late-Romantic German opera, the purists of musical Romanticism (such as Hanslick) argued that the perfect embodiment of their musical ideal was found in instrumental music, and particularly in that by Johannes Brahms.



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  • hollinsuk
  •  wrote in 19:15
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Many thanks for this share.

Cheers.
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  • platico
  •  wrote in 21:48
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gracias...