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Brahms/ Biret/ Kohn/ Matthies - Easy Listening Piano Classics

Brahms/ Biret/ Kohn/ Matthies - Easy Listening Piano Classics

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Although Johannes Brahms (1833-1897) has a reputation as a composer of serious, large-scale, complex music, many of his best known and most commercially successful works are actually small in scale and were written for the booming contemporary market of domestic music-makers. Among these latter compositions many of his piano works may be numbered, although many pose formidable challenges for the amateur pianist. Between his powerful Piano Sonata No 1 in C major, Op 1 (1852) and the Eleven Chorale Preludes for organ, Op 122 (1896), Brahms wrote many keyboard pieces, the earliest of which on this selection is the Piano Sonata No 3 in F minor, Op 5 (1865)-from which the Andante espressivo is drawn-the latest his Piano Pieces, Op 119 (1893)-from which the first, second and third Intermezzos are taken. Brahms' abilities as a pianist were evident from his youth, and his approach to music was quite practical. In his teens, he investigated both serious and popular musical styles, making arrangements for his father's orchestra and playing piano in local dance halls. (The frequently told story that he was forced to play in brothels, although apparently originating with the composer himself, seems to have no foundation in fact.) Aged twenty he started touring as an accompanist and made important contacts in the musical world, meeting Robert and Clara Schumann, both of whom were highly influential on his life and career. His love for and devotion to Clara, herself an accomplished pianist, would last throughout his life. From the early 1860s, Brahms based himself in Vienna, so it's hardly surprising that the city's emblematic dance form, the waltz, should inspire him to compose several of his own. The delightful Sixteen Waltzes, Op 39 (1865) and the popular Liebeslieder [Love Song] Waltzes, Op 52 (1870)-later arranged for piano four-hands as Op 52a-rank among his most open-hearted contributions. Unlike some of his supporters, Brahms was certainly no musical snob, as his lifelong friendship with Johann Strauss II attests. Brahms once remarked that he would have given anything to have written The Blue Danube, and when Strauss' wife Adele asked Brahms to autograph her fan, he wrote a few notes from the iconic waltz with the words 'Alas, not by Brahms!' 1869 saw the publication of his hugely popular Hungarian Dances, for which Brahms, regarding them as arrangements rather than original compositions, did not assign an opus number. The year 1878 saw the publication of Brahms' Eight Pieces for piano, Op 76, a collection of capriccios and intermezzos that marks his increasing concentration on shorter, highly characterful works. The Seven Fantasias for piano, Op 116 (1892) were the first fruits of an amazing late flowering that continued with the Three Intermezzi for piano, Op 117 (1892), the Six Pieces for piano, Op 118 (1893) and the Four Pieces for piano, Op 119 (1893). With these remarkable miniatures, Brahms seems to summarize his entire compositional career, recalling both the muscular virtuosity of his earlier piano music, paying tribute to the character pieces of Couperin and Schumann, and perhaps even taking note of the 'Impressionist' piano music of Debussy though heard through a thoroughly Brahmsian filter.
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