Shapley wrote:Then I shall guess that it is Geistliches Wiegenlied (Sacred Lullaby), part of the 2 songs for alto, viola, and piano, Opus 91.
Yup, you got it Shap!
And yes *ig, it does mention Mary, the mother of Jesus.
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Shapley wrote:Then I shall guess that it is Geistliches Wiegenlied (Sacred Lullaby), part of the 2 songs for alto, viola, and piano, Opus 91.
Shapley wrote:I noticed that it was in your library list, once you bumped it back to the top. I've not heard the piece before - I didn't used to be a fan of Brahms, although I have a collection of his symphonies on vinyl collecting dust somwhere in the basement. My tastes have changed somewhat over the past several years, perhaps I should give his music another try.
bignaf wrote:are you asking if the fact that it said often is accurate? if so, yes.
if you're asking whether Brahms was ultra-conservative, the answer is no. he strayed far from classical, but in different ways than Wagner. Wagner and his followers felt that being radical had to involve rejection of absolute (not dramartic/programatic music). that ended up being a temporary fad, since the 20th century showed a massive resurjence of absolute music.
Wagner did move between keys much more quickly than Brahms, and spiced it up with a little more chromaticism. but Brahms had his own harmonic language which was progressive in its own way.
Catmando wrote:It is often said that after Beethoven, the two major directional branch offs were Brahms and Wagner. Brahms being the ultra conservative, don't stray away from the classical style to the radical style of Wagner.
Is this somewhat accurate?
shostakovich wrote:By the way, I once read an evaluation of Wagner that was remarkable. "He was a greater influence in his field than any other person in any other field." I'm not pushing or refuting that assessment. I'm just stunned by the gravity of it.
Shos
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