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Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer - Mendelssohn: Variations concertantes - Cello Sonata No. 1 & No. 2 - Lied ohne Worte (2024) [Hi-Res]

Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer - Mendelssohn: Variations concertantes - Cello Sonata No. 1 & No. 2 - Lied ohne Worte (2024) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Mendelssohn: Variations concertantes - Cello Sonata No. 1 & No. 2 - Lied ohne Worte
  • Year Of Release: 1976 / 2024
  • Label: VDE-GALLO
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) [96kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 1:03:42
  • Total Size: 1.19 GB / 297 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: I. Thema (01:04)
2. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: II. Variation I (00:30)
3. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: III. Variation II (00:32)
4. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: IV. Più vivace Variation (00:32)
5. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: V. Allegro con fuoco Variation (00:38)
6. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: VI. L'istesso tempo Variation I (00:43)
7. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: VII. L'istesso tempo Variation II (00:30)
8. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: VIII. Presto ed agitato Variation (01:27)
9. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Variations concertantes, Op. 17, MWV Q19: IX. Tempo I. Coda. Più animato (02:51)
10. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 1, in B-Flat Major, Op, 45, MWV Q27: I. Allegro vivace (09:26)
11. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 1, in B-Flat Major, Op, 45, MWV Q27: II. Andante (05:06)
12. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 1, in B-Flat Major, Op, 45, MWV Q27: III. Allegro assai (07:00)
13. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 2 in D Major, Op. 58, MWV Q32: I. Allegro assai vivace (10:16)
14. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 2 in D Major, Op. 58, MWV Q32: II. Allegro scherzando (05:31)
15. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 2 in D Major, Op. 58, MWV Q32: III. Adagio (05:01)
16. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Cello Sonata No. 2 in D Major, Op. 58, MWV Q32: IV. Molto Allegro e vivace (07:48)
17. Rolf Looser & Brigitte Meyer – Lied ohne Worte, Op. 109, MWV Q34 (04:38)

Certain prejudices concerning Mendelssohn must be cleared away. His music, we are told, is the direct expression of a happy, wealthy and carefree life. This existence, however, was only seemingly happy, and although Mendelssohn belonged to the Romantic age, he nevertheless professed the classical ideal.

The happy life of a brilliant German Jew, with a talent not only for music but also for painting and philosophy… this is hardly the stuff to inspire biographers. But it would be exaggerated to claim that Mendelssohn’s life was cloudless. This hypersensitive man went through some severe crises. The last one, due to the death of his sister in 1847, cost him his life: and yet he had been married to the daughter of a parson from Neuchâtel, Cécille Jeanrenaud, for ten years, had four children and nourished a secret passion for a singer, Jenny Lind… what mystery is hidden behind this deadly despair? He was tried physically, too: a long-standing paralysis of the knee, cholera… Finally, not even his career was a series of continual successes: his only opera, The Wedding of Camacho, was a failure, and he was mortified at not being allowed to succeed his professor, Zelter, at the Singakademie in Berlin. He went through periods of depression which inevitably followed spells of intense activity. If his life is seen as a sequence of travels, receptions, rides, drawing-room concerts, parties, family performances, congratulations, and pleasant conversations, it is easy to forget the energy he displayed as a conductor, pianist, composer, and organizer. Under his influence, Leipzig became the musical centre of Europe. He fought for fair remuneration for the musicians of the Gewandhaus Orchestra, he conducted numerous new works, including some famous productions — the first revival of the St. Matthew Passion by Bach, the world premiere of Schubert’s Ninth Symphony, generally considered unplayable — and he wrote 121 works, not counting the unpublished ones, although he lived only two years longer than Mozart.

Mendelssohn continued to profess the classical ideal, in contradiction to the opinions of the “musicians of the future” like Liszt and Wagner, of whom he said: “According to them, music has to be elevated to the height of a science, as required by the demands of progress; it must represent personages and events psychologically. In my view, a composer does not have to express pure ideas, but must combine notes harmoniously: we should not expect from music what we obtain from books.” This so very “bourgeois” attitude of his was resented among the members of the Wagnerian circles who set the tone for almost a century. Nowadays it is thought that Mendelssohn anticipated the modern attitude of respecting the music of the older masters: without imitating them, Mendelssohn restored the fame of Bach, Handel, Haydn, and Mozart at a time when Hummel was considered classical. And we can only render homage to this enemy of all systems who claimed: “I like to take music seriously. I do not believe that I am free to compose anything without being entirely pervaded by my subject. It seems to me that this would be a sort of lie.” Wagner himself called him “the greatest specific musician since Mozart.”


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