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Johannes Brahms Zigeunerlieder Op. 103 1. He, Zigeuner, greife in die Saiten 2. Hochgetürmte Rimaflut 3. Wißt ihr, wann mein Kindchen 4. Lieber Gott, d. .
This complete volume is for four solo voices and piano accompaniment. The Complete Liebeslieder and Zigeunerlieder.
One side with "Liebeslieder Walzer", 10 tracks. Two sides with no label, untitled piece of music, and no gaps between tracks. Before 1963 (Marcel De Pauw died in 1963).
Liebeslieder-Walzer; Liebeslieder op. 52. Authorities. Opus/Catalogue NumberOp. Arranged for piano 4 hands (without voices) by Brahms, 1874 (first performance in this version: Vienna, 14 November 1874; published in 1874 as "O. 2a"); N. exists in two variants. Zigeunerlieder, O. 03.
Johannes Brahms' Liebeslieder Waltzes are distributed across two opus numbers: 52 and 65. The waltzes are a collection of love songs in Ländler style for voices and four hands piano. The lyrics for the Liebeslieder come from Georg Friedrich Daumer's Polydora collection of folk songs and love poems. One composer in particular who influenced Brahms, specifically within the Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52 was Franz Schubert. Brahms’s admiration of Schubert becomes apparent when looking at early performances of Schubert’s pieces and the tendency to study, at length, the composer’s works. According to Brodbeck, Schubert influenced Brahms’s Liebeslieder Walzer op. 52 through similarities to the 20 Ländler.
From the Album Brahms: Choral Music.
In Brahms’s total work the Zigeunerlieder can be seen – on the one hand – as a vocal counterpart of the Hungarian Dances and – on the other hand – as exotic counterpart to the more-referenced Liebesliederwalzer Opp. 52 and 65. The first public performance of the songs Op. 103 was on 31 October 1888 in Berlin, with great success, although the presentation of the opus in a concert hall presented some bad feelings to the composer, since Brahms had conceived his opus genuinely for soloist quartets, and had thought of performances at home.
Liebeslieder (German, lit. "love songs") may refer to love songs in general, or to these specific works: Liebeslieder, Op. 114 (Strauss), a waltz by Johann Strauss II. Liebeslieder Walzer (Brahms Opus 52), waltzes by Johannes Brahms for four-hands piano and vocal quartet. Neue Liebeslieder, Opus 65, a sequel to Brahms' Opus 52, for piano and voices. Liebeslieder Walzer (ballet), George Balanchine's ballet based on the two Brahms works.
Company : Oxford Lieder. Holywell Music Room, Oxford, Vereinigtes Königreich. Liebeslieder walzer 25 october 2017, 19:30. Le Nozze Di Figaro (Mozart).
| A | ZigeunerliederComposed By – Johannes Brahms |
| B | Liebeslieder WalzerComposed By – Johannes Brahms |
| C | Untitled |
| D | Untitled |
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