Anima Eterna Brugge | Jos van Immerseel
Anima Eterna Brugge | Jos van Immerseel
Adding product to your cart
NOTE: THIS IS A 6 VOLUME DISC DOWNLOAD!!
The TSoT hosting system only allows for 5 volumes to be simultaneously transferred.
After purchase and receiving folders 1 to 5, you will receive no. 6 by manual transfer as soon as possible!
There is no other automated way to do this, so we hope you understand this slight inconvenience.
(For sure long before you are finished listening to volume 1-5;-))
Ludwig van Beethoven
Complete Symphonies & Ouvertures
Die Geschöpfe des Prometheus, op.43
Symphony no.1 in c major, op. 21 (1800)
Symphony no.2 in D major, op. 36 (1802)
Anima Eterna Brugge | Jos van Immerseel
ALPHA / HQ|NORTHSTAR
Catalogue ALPHA380
(Low Resolution excerpts)
In search of lost time: Beethoven and his orchestra
by Jos van Immerseel
At the present time, collectors and institutions are prepared to spend millions of euros for a manuscript by Beethoven, not only for one of his scores, but also for letters or mere jottings. Millions of visitors file through the dozens of museums devoted to the composer and past the monuments which commemorate him. His bust watches over innumerable pianos and mantelpieces, while his portrait adorns postage stamps and even, in hologram, credit cards. For Beethoven is generally regarded as the most important composer of western civilisation. ln 1977, the space probes Voyager 1 and 2 even took his music into space, as a possible means of communication if they should encounter extraterrestrial civilisations! Many people see Beethoven as the first ‘modern’ composer, a hero overshadowing even Napoleon, an absolute genius, a superman. But there is no greater sign of respect for a composer than to take his music seriously. Truly great minds wish to be understood for their work alone - as was also the case with Beethoven. The account of his teaching left by the pianist and composer Ferdinand Ries is a good illustration of this: ‘If I made mistakes in a passage, hit the wrong keys or missed intervals . . . he seldom said anything. But if I had not grasped the expression of crescendos and so forth, or the essential character of the work, he grew angry, for, he said errors of the first type were mere accidents, but the other kind displayed a lack of knowledge, of feeling or of attention.’ We are no longer lucky enough to be able to play the master’s works in his presence, in order to fathom his precise intentions. His penetration and his ability to express the most profound ideas in music have remained unequalled. Similarly, his understanding of the specific characteristics of the instruments of his time was exceptional. How can we still form an idea of these today? His art is most effectively rendered in an interpretation in which respect and freedom go hand in hand. Respect entails conscientious execution of the written text, the use of the instruments prescribed by the composer and implementation of the various elements which went without saying at the time - pitch, performance practice, internal orchestral balance, respect of tempo markings, and so on. The dimension of freedom lies in the right to be an individual of today with one’s (invariably personal) culture and sensibility, to blend the available elements as one sees fit, and to communicate all of this to an audience. It is when respect and freedom engage in fruitful dialogue that Beethoven is most likely to appear in his full gravity, drama, wit and humour.
DISC 1
Die Geschöpfe des Prometheus, op.43
Overture in c major (1801) 4’32
Symphony no.1 in c major, op. 21 (1800)
I Adagio molto – allegro con brio 8’51
II Andante cantabile con moto 7’05
III Menuetto: allegro molto e vivace 3’17
IV Finale: adagio - allegro molto e vivace 5’43
Symphony no.2 in D major, op. 36 (1802)
I Adagio molto – allegro con brio 12’25
II Larghetto 10’49
III Scherzo: allegro 3’41
IV Allegro molto 6’12
DISC 2
Symphony no.3 in e flat major, op. 55 ‘Sinfonia Eroica’ (1804)
I Allegro con brio 16’46
II Marcia Funebre: Adagio assai 13’23
III Scherzo: Allegro vivace 5’36
IV Finale: Allegro molto 10’54
Coriolan, op. 62 (1807)
Overture in c minor 6’43
Egmont, op. 84 (1810)
Overture in F minor 7’09
Die ruinen von Athen, op. 113 (1811)
I Overture in g minor 4’03
II Marcia alla Turca in b Flat major 2’00
DISC 3
Symphony no.5 in c minor, op. 67 (1808)
I Allegro con brio 6’16
II Andante con moto 8’08
III Allegro 4’30
IV Allegro 10’46
Symphony no.4 in b flat major, op. 60 (1806)
I Adagio – Allegro vivace 10’19
II Adagio 9’39
III Allegro vivace 5’26
IV Allegro ma non troppo 6’37
DISC 4
Symphony no.6 in f major, op. 68 ‘Sinfonia Pastorale’ (1808)
I Allegro ma non troppo ‘Wakening of joyful feelings on arrival in the country’ 10’23
II Andante molto moto ‘Scene at the brook’ 11’59
III Allegro ‘Merrymaking of the country Folk’ 4’43
IV Allegro ‘Thunderstorm’ 4’00
V Allegretto ‘Pastoral Song.
Feeling of happiness and gratitude after the storm’ 9’15
Symphony no.8 in f major, op. 93 (1812)
I Allegro vivace e con brio 8’32
II Allegretto Scherzando 3’58
III Tempo di minuetto 4’24
IV Allegro vivace 7’07
DISC 5
Symphony no.7 in a major, op. 92 (1812)
I Poco Sostenuto – vivace 12’56
II Allegretto 8’17
III Presto 8’24
IV Allegro con brio 8’52
Die Weihe des Hauses, op. 124 (1822)
Overture in c major 10’53
DISC 6
Symphony no.9 in D minor, op. 125 (1824)
I Allegro ma non troppo, un poco maestoso
II Molto vivace
III Adagio molto e cantabile
IV Presto - Allegro assai
V Presto - Rezitativo
VI Allegro assai vivace alla marcia
VII Allegro ma non tanto
total time: 65’22
If you like this production, you also might like the following recordings hereunder in the Related products section.