Klavierkonzert Nr. 4 G-Dur op. 58 - 8. Teil

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Titel Klavierkonzert Nr. 4 G-Dur op. 58 - 8. Teil
Titelzusatz Piano Concerto No. 4, part 8
Spieldauer 00:02:39
Urheber/innen Beethoven, Ludwig van [Komponist/in] [GND]
Mitwirkende Backhaus, Wilhelm [Klavier] [GND]
Krauss, Clemens [Dirigent] [GND]
Wiener Philharmoniker [Orchester]
Decca [Label]
The Decca Record Co. Ltd. [Produzent]
Datum 1951 [Vermutliches Datum]
Ort Wien, Theater an der Wien [Ortsbezug]
Schlagworte Musik ; E-Musik ; Konzert - Konzert für Klavier und Orchester ; Besetzung - Orchester ; Publizierte und vervielfältigte Aufnahme
19. Jahrhundert
Typ audio
Format SCS [Schallplatte, Schellack]
Nummern AKX 28542 [Bestellnummer]
MRA 1015 [Katalognummer]
DMRA 1015 1 [Matrizennummer]
Sprache Englisch
Signatur Österreichische Mediathek, 2-44201_b_b01_k02
Medienart Mp3-Audiodatei
Theater an der Wien. Bild: CC BY-SA 3.0 AT. Österreichische Mediathek 2020

Theater an der Wien. Bild: CC BY-SA 3.0 AT. Österreichische Mediathek 2020

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The Theater an der Wien was opened in 1801. In the early part of the 19th century it served as a concert venue, including for a recital given by Beethoven on 22 December 1808. The programme included the first public performance of his Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, op. 58. The concerto had been composed in 1805 and 1806, but its only previous performance had been for an exclusive audience at the palace belonging to his patron Prince Franz Joseph Lobkowitz. The piece is especially notable for being the first of Beethoven’s concertos to incorporate symphonic elements.

The concerto was a particularly significant work in the career of the German pianist Wilhelm Backhaus (1884–1969); his interpretation of it in his first concert outside his hometown, in Darmstadt in 1899, was a major success. In the course of his extensive career, Backhaus established a reputation as an outstanding interpreter of Beethoven in particular. He wrote a long cadenza of his own for the third movement of the Concerto in G major, which begins cheerfully before giving way to a frenzied rondo driven by timpani and trumpets, and this cadenza appears at the beginning of the excerpt reproduced here. After a final variation of the rondo theme, the concerto concludes with an artful stretta. This recording was made in 1951 with the Vienna Philharmonic, conducted by Clemens Krauss (1893–1954). Kraus was the orchestra’s last permanent subscription conductor (from 1930 to 1933) and it was he who began the tradition of the New Year's Concert, in 1939.
(Constanze Köhn)

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