Friday, May 5, 2017

Brahms- Symphony No.3 III Op. 90

Brahms's focus on orchestral compositions in 1880-85 was partly encouraged by his having a great orchestra at his disposal. In the later years Brahms preferred the natural beauty found in rural surroundings.

-The piece was composed because Brahms looked back onto his younger days with the musical quotation of the motto Frei aber froh (“Free but happy”). He wanted to keep writing as he did in his younger days. The premiere performance was given on 2 December 1883 by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. The premiere of the symphony as a whole was almost cancelled because, even though Wagner had died earlier that year, the public feud between Brahms and Wagner was still going on on and Wagner enthusiasts tried to interfere with the symphony's premiere, and the conflict nearly started fights. 
-The genre is an Orchestral symphony
-The form of the third movement is ternary (ABA). The opening cello theme aspires to be infinite. It's slow, twelve-measure unfolding arrives at no closure, but rather at more gestures in an upward direction. The theme ends with the expected tonic displaced up to an F and the dissonance is resolved as the theme begins again in the first violins. The opening theme is repeated without change until its conclusion where the tonic is heard in the "correct" spot. The central A-Major section is composed of offbeat accents, major-minor shifts, and cello counterpoint. The starting cello theme is then brought back.

http://www.laphil.com/philpedia/music/symphony-no-3-f-major-op-90-johannes-brahms
http://www1.lasalle.edu/~reese/Brahms_sym.htmhttps://books.google.com/books?id=qcOqQ3YyYUcC&pg=PA68&lpg=PA68&dq=brahms+heavy+brass&source=bl&ots=kWixVurjUQ&sig=x4rPC-dmKLBARf1T6WN6J-CdmbM&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjIsLrytdnTAhUo_4MKHR_bCtUQ6AEIQjAJ#v=onepage&q=brahms%20heavy%20brass&f=false


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HNTLIfFZe18

Serenade for Strings in C Major Op. 48



     Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovksy was born on May 7, 1840, in Russia. Early in his life he attended the Moscow Conservatory, which is where a lot of his well-known works were completed. His work was first publicly performed in 1865. In 1868, his First Symphony was well-received. In 1874, he established himself with his Piano Concerto No. 1 in B-flat Minor. Tchaikovsky resigned from the Moscow conservatory in 1878 and spent the rest of his career just composing. He died in St. Petersburg on November 6, 1893.
     In September 1880, Tchaikovsky wrote to his patron Nadezhda von Meck, “No, sooner had I begun to spend several days relaxing, than I began to feel somewhat restless and rather unwell… I busied myself a little with designs for a future symphony. I immediately began to feel cheerful, well and relaxed. Now here I am already with designs for a symphony or string quartet; I do not yet which.”
Just one month later the “symphony or string quartet” had found a final form, and he told von Meck the results of his efforts. “I have written two long works very rapidly: the festival overture and a serenade in four movements for string orchestra. The overture will be very noisy. I wrote it without much warmth of enthusiasm. The Serenade, however, I wrote from an inward impulse.” The piece has remained in the orchestral repertoire since the first public performance in 1882. The light first movement is bracketed by a slow folk-like theme that also appears at the end of the entire work. The second movement is a waltz with the flowing melody we learned about in Symphony No. 4. The third movement begins with a sweet, romantic, motive, but turns at the end.