Beethoven & Schönberg Les Pléiades
Album info
Album-Release:
2019
HRA-Release:
31.01.2020
Label: NoMadMusic
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: Les Pléiades
Composer: Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951), Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827): Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68:
- 1 Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68: I. Allegro ma non troppo (Arr. for String Sextet) 11:42
- 2 Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68: II. Andante molto moto (Arr. for String Sextet) 12:37
- 3 Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68: III. Allegro (Arr. for String Sextet) 05:09
- 4 Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68: IV. Allegro [ ] (Arr. for String Sextet) 03:50
- 5 Symphonie No. 6 en Fa Majeur, Op. 68: V . Allegretto (Arr. for String Sextet) 09:28
- Arnold Schönberg (1874 - 1951):
- 6 Verklärte Nacht, Op. 4 28:25
Info for Beethoven & Schönberg
"No one on earth loves nature more than I. I like a tree more than a fellow man." (Ludwig van Beethoven).
Composed in 1808 along with the Fifth Symphony, the Sixth Symphony, called ‘Pastoral,’ constitutes an exception in Beethoven's ‘heroic’ period. Through its five movements, he paints an idyllic world of nature, country scenes in which folk music themes mingle with the sounds of nature disturbed by a storm.
In this symphony, Beethoven depicts man's profound feelings towards nature, employing a resolutely modern writing style that blazes a trail towards Romanticism. As soon as the work was published, the organist and composer Michael Gottard Fischer shared his transcription of the Sixth Symphony for string sextet with salon audiences all over Europe. In his visionary writing, he was able to utilize the timbre and power of the six string instruments to reproduce Beethoven's idea. In this way, the transcription naturally takes its place in chamber music repertoire.
In 1899, Arnold Schönberg, founder of the Viennese school, was inspired by a poem from his friend Richard Dehmel to compose Verklärte Nacht, dedicated to his love at the time, Mathilde Zemlinsky. ‘Your poems have exercised a decisive influence on my development as a composer. They have pushed me to find a new lyrical tone.
Les Pléiades:
Laetitia Ringeval, violin
Caroline Florenville, violin
Carole Dauphin, viola
Marie Kuchinski, viola
Jennifer Hardy, cello
Amaryllis Jarczyk, cello
No biography found.
Booklet for Beethoven & Schönberg