♣ 음악 감상실 ♣/- 드보르작

Antonin Dvorak - piano quintet 전곡( 1번, 2번)

Bawoo 2014. 10. 15. 10:10

Antonin Dvorak

 

드볼작 9번 교향곡 "신세계" 전악장 감상 / 제2악장 / 꿈 속의 고향 /Chorus by Livera boy's choir

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Piano Quintet No. 1 in A major, B. 28 (Op. 5) 

 

Performers: Sviatoslav Richter (piano),
Borodin Quartet: Mikhail Kopelman (violin I), Andrei Abramenkov (violin II),

Dmitri Shebalin (viola), Valentin Berlinsky (cello)
- Year of recording: 1982

 

 

00:00 - I. Allegro ma non troppo
08:34 - II. Andante sostenuto
19:37 - III. Finale. Allegro con brio

If there is any real importance to Antonín Dvorák's early Piano Quintet No. 1 in A major, Op. 5, it lies in

the fact that were not this piece, when all is said and done, an unsatisfying work of music, one of the crown jewels of the chamber music repertoire, Dvorák's Piano Quintet No. 2 in A major, Op. 81 [uploaded on this channel], would likely never have been composed.

The story is an interesting one. A few months after Dvorák finished Op. 5, it was given a performance and

forgotten -- the composer was at that point an unknown musical figure. Many years after that, in the late 1880s, after he had made a name for himself composing Slavonic and Moravian trifles and more substantial works, Dvorák unearthed Op. 5 and started to tinker with it -- he often revised early works, with varying degrees of success. He found, however, that he could not remake the music into something he liked, so he abandoned the work once again and immediately started composing a new piano quintet in the same key. Many decades and several major wars would go by before the Op. 5 Quintet was again unearthed and finally published.

The three-movement Piano Quintet, Op. 5 will probably always remain a novelty piece, but it does contain some moments of fine music. There is a pleasing sway to the opening movement, and some lovely instrumental songs in the central Andante; the third movement gallops along energetically, if perhaps a bit clumsily.

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piano quintet in A major, Op. 81

Performed by Kathryn Selby and Parker String Quartet. Filmed live by Kahuna Digital at

 City Recital Hall Angel Place, Sydney, 2 September, 2008.

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This magnificent performance of Antonin Dvořák's Piano Quintet, Op. 81 was only one piece of

a superb programme played by several of the master musicians who spend two weeks each year

teaching at the annual International Academy of Music Festival in Tuscany. What makes this

performance so remarkable is that these musicians had very limited time to rehearse together

 and only after a full day giving master classes to the students! It was performed in one of the

beautiful old churches of Barga, Tuscany in 2005.

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Éva Szalai-piano
Tamás Diószegi, Rajmund Ónodi-violin
Mihály Várnagy-viola
Ildikó Czvik-cello

Live concert recording; 2011., Budapest

 

<해설>

String Quintet No. 2 in G major, Opus 77, (B. 49) was originally composed in early March 1875 and first

performed on March 18, 1876 in Prague at the concert of the Umělecká beseda.

It is scored for two violins, viola, cello, and double bass. First marked as Op. 18, it was later slightly

revised in 1888 as opus 77. It has since been assigned the Burghauser number 49. Dvořák entered the piece in a competition and was awarded 5 ducats for the composition. The work bears the competition's motto, "To my Nation," as its dedication.

Although the original work was scored in five movements, Dvořák later withdrew the second movement,

entitled "Intermezzo," due to concerns that having two slow movements made the work too lengthy.

This extracted movement was later reworked and republished as the Nocturne for Strings in B major,

Op. 40 (B. 47). Some modern ensembles choose to restore the intermezzo when performing the work.

The work was published in 1888 by Simrock, not under its original opus number 18, but as Opus 77.

 

 

 

<Structure>

The quintet consists of four movements:

<Selected recordings>

  • String Quintet No. 2, String Sextet. CD Supraphon (11 1461-2 131).
  • The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center: Dvorak Serenade. Perf. Joseph Silverstein, Ani Kavafian, Paul Neubauer, Gary Hoffman, Edgar Meyer. CD. Delos, 1995.