Brahms: String Quintets - CD Music

by Johannes Brahms
label: BIS, June of 2024 ‧
OUT OF STOCK OR NOT AVAILABLE

Brahms: String Quintets - CD

by Johannes Brahms

Property Description
label: BIS
Release Date: June of 2024
Dimensions: 125 x 140 x 8 mm
Format: Music
Categories: Classic > Camera Music
EAN: 7318599927275
Number of disks: 1
Format: SACD

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Johannes Brahms

Johannes Brahms was one of the most important composers of the Romantic era, born on May 7, 1833 in Hamburg, Germany, and died on April 3, 1897 in Vienna, Austria. Brahms is widely regarded as one of the greatest composers of Western music, known for his ability to combine the emotional depth of Romanticism with a formal classical structure.

Brahms began his musical training at a young age, having shown a prodigious talent on the piano. He studied with several important professors, and in 1853 he met the composer Robert Schumann, who became one of his greatest supporters. Schumann, in an article titled "Neue Bahnen" ("New Paths"), proclaimed Brahms as the future of German music, an accolade that helped launch Brahms's career.

Throughout his life, Brahms composed a vast amount of music, including symphonies, concertos, chamber music, choral works, piano pieces, and songs. Among his most famous works are his four symphonies, the Piano Concerto No. 2, the Violin Concerto, the German Requiem (Ein deutsches Requiem), and the Hungarian Dances.

Brahms was known to be extremely self-critical and perfectionist, often destroying works that he did not consider up to his standards. This perfectionism was reflected in the quality and consistency of his compositions, which are widely admired for their melodic beauty, rhythmic complexity, and emotional depth.

Despite being often seen as a conservative due to his attachment to classical forms, Brahms was able to innovate within those forms, bringing an emotional richness and harmonic sophistication that influenced generations of composers who came after him. He is often compared to Ludwig van Beethoven, and his symphonies are considered the successors to Beethoven's in the tradition of German symphonic music.

His music continues to be widely performed and studied around the world, and is considered essential to the classical repertoire. Johannes Brahms is remembered not only for his significant contributions to music, but also for his profound impact on the evolution of classical music during the nineteenth century.

(see more)

BY THE SAME ARTIST