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Anton Bruckner - Requiem & Four Orchestral Pieces album

Anton Bruckner - Requiem & Four Orchestral Pieces album

  • Performer: Anton Bruckner
  • Genre: Classical
  • Title: Requiem & Four Orchestral Pieces
  • Released: 1970
  • Style: Romantic, Choral
  • MP3 version size: 1967 mb
  • FLAC version size: 1694 mb
  • Other: VOC DTS AAC XM AA DMF VOC
  • Rating: 4.9
  • Votes: 687

Description

Anton Bruckner - Čtyři orchestrální části- č. 2 Moderato, č. 4 Andante con moto.

Four Orchestral Pieces (Bruckner). The Four Orchestral Pieces (Vier Orchesterstücke) are four short orchestral pieces, which Anton Bruckner composed in the fall of 1862 during his tuition with Otto Kitzler. During the summer of 1862, when studying with Otto Kitzler in Linz, Bruckner composed his first instrumental work, the String Quartet in C minor.

Anton Bruckner - An Introduction. Discographic Horrors. Bruckner and the Third Reich. Bruckner and the "Thunderbolt" Phenomenon. Bruckner and Christmas. Tales from the Crypt. Selected Album Covers. Bruckner Archive Acquisitions.

Four Orchestral Pieces (1862). Overture in G minor (1862–1863). March in E-flat major (1865).

Animated Brooding Defiant Dramatic Energetic Flowing Gloomy Lively Marching Melancholy Melodic Pastoral. Gustavo Gimeno, Orchestre Philharmonique du Luxembourg. Bruckner: Symphony No. 1; Four Orchestral Pieces. 3. Scherzo: Lebhaft - Trio: Langsam. 4. Finale: Bewegt, feurig. Three Pieces for Orchestra WAB 97. 6. Moderato. 7. Allegro non troppo.

By Anton Bruckner, Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra, Gustavo Gimeno. Listen to Bruckner: Symphony No. 1 & 4 Orchestral Pieces now. 1 & 4 Orchestral Pieces in full in the this site app. Play on this site.

Anton Bruckner: ein Lebens- und Schaffens-Bild, Band 3, Teil 2 Regensburg: Gustav Bosse, 1930. Possibly published in the Göllerich and Auer biography of Bruckner. The numbering of the pieces is off by one because the piano arrangement of WAB 96 was listed as n.

The Four Orchestral Pieces (Vier Orchesterstücke) are four short orchestral pieces, which Anton Bruckner composed in the fall of 1862 during his tuition with Otto Kitzler. Bruckner considered the earliest orchestral works (the "study" Symphony in F minor, the three orchestral pieces, the March in D minor and the Overture in G minor, which he composed in 1862-1863), mere school exercises, done under the supervision of Otto Kitzler. List of symphonies by Anton Bruckner List of motets by Anton Bruckner List of masses by Anton Bruckner Te Deum (Bruckner) Romantic music.

Feelings of reverence and awe are accentuated by organ-like sonorities which are given new dimensions with blazes of orchestral colour and disconcerting titanic shifts. Little wonder that his first symphony so bemused audiences at its premiere. Also included in this release are his Four Orchestral Pieces from 1862.

Mariss Jansons guides the Concertgebouw Orchestra, the Netherlands Radio Choir and vocal soloists through Brahms’s awe-inspiring Ein deutsches Requiem. Mariss Jansons guides the Concertgebouw Orchestra, the Netherlands Radio Choir and vocal soloists through Brahms’s awe-inspiring Ein deutsches Requiem. Brahms’s Ein deutsches Requiem.

Tracklist

1 Requiem aeternam
2 Dies irae
3 Domine Jesu Christe
4 Hostias et preces
5 Quam olim Abrahae
6 Sanctus
7 Benedictus
8 Agnus Dei
9 Requiem aeternam
10 Cum sanctis tuis
11 Four Orchestral Pieces: Moderato, E flat major
12 Four Orchestral Pieces: F major
13 Four Orchestral Pieces: e minor
14 Four Orchestral Pieces: March d minor

Credits

  • Bass Vocals – Colin Wheatley (tracks: 1-10)
  • Choir – The Alexandra Choir (tracks: 1-10)
  • Conductor – Charles Proctor (tracks: 1-10), Hans-Hubert Schönzeler (tracks: 11-14)
  • Contralto Vocals – Sylvia Swan (tracks: 1-10)
  • Orchestra – The London Philharmonic Orchestra (tracks: 11-14)
  • Organ – Robert Munns (tracks: 1-10)
  • Soprano Vocals – Barbara Yates (tracks: 1-10)
  • Tenor Vocals – John Steel (tracks: 1-10)