CPE Strauss
CPE Strauss
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Ludwig Morelly, Lustig zum Tanze, Walzer, Arr. CPE Strauss
From www.cpestrauss.com
www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/lustig-zum-tanze%2C-walzer
My orchestration from the Witzendorf piano score of this waltz by Ludwig Morelly. It dates from the early 1860’s. It’s a perfectly pleasant, pretty, professionally written waltz of the period but it’s a bit run of the mill. There’s not much chance that you’ll remember the tunes for long after you’ve heard it. I’m struggling to do it and I have just lived with it for a week.
I did have a cynical moment, though. Morelly started his career in the 1830’s and there are a few pieces published by Diabelli then. There is a huge gap till about 1860 where he doesn’t seem to have found a publisher for his work, although he continued to write and perform successfully. Then there’s a flurry of pieces published by Witzendorf. Morelly’s brother Franz was very successful in the 1830’s and his work was published regularly until he went to Bombay to work for the British East India Company. He was a success there and wrote over two hundred works but they were not published. Franz died in 1859 and it crossed my mind that a box of good music made it’s way from Bombay to Vienna and was published under Ludwig’s name. A bit of Googling shows that Witzendorf began to publish Ludwig’s work starting in 1858 so I was doing him a disservice. Ludwig was sufficiently respected that all three Strauss brothers attended his funeral.
zhlédnutí: 134

Video

Joseph Lanner, Tritsch Tratsch, Walzer Quodlibet, Op. 78
zhlédnutí 475Před 14 dny
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/cotillons-aus-der-oper-i-montecchi-e-capuleti-[sic],-op.72 My transcription of a manuscript copy of the autograph from the Wien Bibliothek im Rathaus. It has been a catalogue of errors and misunderstandings, most of them mine, not the least of which is that the library also holds the autograph and, with a bit more effort using the indeces, I cou...
Johann Schrammel, Gschnas, Marsch, Op. 86, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 647Před měsícem
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/gschnas,-marsch,-op.-86 My orchestration from the piano score of this march by Johann Schrammel. I assume it was originally written for his quartet. I’ll bet when most people today think of a Viennese ball they think of something like the picture on the right. I prefer to think of something like the picture on the left. I also bet that even thou...
Carl Zeller, Bin schon da!, Polka Schnell, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 660Před měsícem
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/bin-schon-da!,-polka-schnell My orchestration of the Bosworth piano score of this polka by Carl Zeller based on themes from his operetta “Der Obersteiger” I admit to not knowing much music by Zeller and not being familiar with his style of orchestration at all so this is just a generic, late 19th century style orchestration. It’s a fun polka tho...
Philipp Fahrbach I, Lackenhofer Klänge, Walzer, Op. 350, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 762Před měsícem
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/lackenhofer-klänge,-walzer,-op.-350 My orchestration from the Kramer piano score of this waltz by Philipp Fahrbach I. It doesn’t appear in any list of his works that I have seen and the opus number is beyond the last one in any of those lists. I’m sure it’s the right Fahrbach and it looks like a late waltz of his to me. I always think of Fahrbac...
Oscar Fetras, Carmen, Marsch, Op. 137, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 672Před 2 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/carmen-marsch,-op.-137 My orchestrations of these three pieces by Oscar Fetras based on themes from Bizet’s Carmen. I recently had my attention drawn to the orchestration of the waltz that I did a number of years ago. I revised it to take some of my infelicities out and thought I might as well complete the set. As usual, the quadrille caused a d...
Oscar Fetras, Carmen, Quadrille, Op. 140, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 270Před 2 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/carmen-quadrille,-op.-140 My orchestrations of these three pieces by Oscar Fetras based on themes from Bizet’s Carmen. I recently had my attention drawn to the orchestration of the waltz that I did a number of years ago. I revised it to take some of my infelicities out and thought I might as well complete the set. As usual, the quadrille caused ...
Oscar Fetras, Carmen, Walzer, Op. 22, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 354Před 2 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/carmen-walzer,-op.-22 My orchestrations of these three pieces by Oscar Fetras based on themes from Bizet’s Carmen. I recently had my attention drawn to the orchestration of the waltz that I did a number of years ago. I revised it to take some of my infelicities out and thought I might as well complete the set. As usual, the quadrille caused a di...
Josef Bayer, Mir san mir, Walzer, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 298Před 2 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/mir-san-mir,-walzer My orchestration of the third of three waltzes by Bayer published as “Alt-Wien. Drei Walzer nach Motiven von Morelly, Lanner und Strauß für Klavier zweihändig von Josef Bayer. I. "Wiener Kinder". II. "Wien bleibt Wien". III. "Mir san mir". This one is the only one of the three that credits the original composers and the music...
Johann Strauss I, Künstler Ball Tänze, Walzer, Op. 150
zhlédnutí 338Před 3 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/künstler-ball-tänze,-walzer,-op.-150 My transcription from the manuscript of this waltz by Johann Strauss I held in the Wien Bibliothek im Rathaus. This is the second of his two waltzes with the same name. It is my antidote to the Czibulka waltz I did a couple of weeks ago. I never used to have a high opinion of Johann Strauss I but am rapidly c...
C.M Ziehrer, Harmonische Wellen, Walzer, Op. 44, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 390Před 3 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/harmonische-wellen,-walzer,-op.44 My orchestration of this early waltz by Ziehrer, dating from 1865. This probably needs some explanation as there are numerous postings of a version of this on line. I came across it when I was looking for some early Ziehrer to hear his orchestration at this period. The versions of this piece online do not say th...
Alphons Czibulka, Wintermärchen, Walzer, Op. 366, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 281Před 3 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/wintermärchen,-walzer,-op.-366 My arrangement of this waltz by Czibulka containing his most famous tune. I think we’ll just put this one down to experience. I did a polka of his recently which was ok so I thought I’d seek out a waltz. I may have just picked out the wrong one as there are a couple of orchestral waltzes of his on youtube that are ...
Joseph Lanner, Soldaten Tänze, Walzer, Op. 173
zhlédnutí 214Před 4 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/soldaten-tänze,-walzer,-op.-173 My transcription of the autograph score from the Wien Bibliothek. The piece dates from the end of 1840. I have included one small anachronism. Lanner calls for a ratchet. I was unable to find a 19th century one so I have used my grandfather’s 1939 issue Air Raid Precautions rattle. In real life it is LOUD. I have ...
Johann Schrammel, Meran Marsch, Op. 103, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 667Před 4 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/lmusic/meran-marsch,-op.-103 My arrangement of this march by Johann Schrammel. It would have been written for a Schrammel quartet (G clarinet, two violins and an overly complicated guitar) but works well for orchestra. The only slight issue is in the trio, marked “Jodler aus dem steirischen Volkslied Erzherzog Johann” which was likely to have been writ...
Alphons Czibulka, Am Trapez, Polka Schnell, Op. 384, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 780Před 4 měsíci
From www.cpestrauss.com www.cpestrauss.com/pmusic/am-trapez,-polka-schnell,-op.-384 My orchestration of this quick polka by Czibulka, a composer who is almost completely neglected these days except for one tune beloved of silent film accompaniments, This is fun and, yet again, plenty of opportunities to wrong foot the dancers.
Philipp Fahrbach I, Nachtschwärmer, Walzer, Op. 211
zhlédnutí 594Před 5 měsíci
Philipp Fahrbach I, Nachtschwärmer, Walzer, Op. 211
C.M. Ziehrer, Hand in Hand, Opern Quadrille, Op. 77, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 614Před 5 měsíci
C.M. Ziehrer, Hand in Hand, Opern Quadrille, Op. 77, Arr. CPE Strauss
C.M. Ziehrer, Erzherzog Wilhelm, Marsch, Op. 174, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 755Před 5 měsíci
C.M. Ziehrer, Erzherzog Wilhelm, Marsch, Op. 174, Arr. CPE Strauss
Josef Hellmesberger jnr., Nelly, Walzer, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 597Před 6 měsíci
Josef Hellmesberger jnr., Nelly, Walzer, Arr. CPE Strauss
Eduard Strauss, Passe Partout, Schnellpolka, Op. 196, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 1,3KPřed 6 měsíci
Eduard Strauss, Passe Partout, Schnellpolka, Op. 196, Arr. CPE Strauss
CPE Strauss, Polka on English Airs, Op. 87
zhlédnutí 285Před 6 měsíci
CPE Strauss, Polka on English Airs, Op. 87
Johann Strauss I, Pariser-Polka (nach englischen Motiven), well maybe!
zhlédnutí 223Před 6 měsíci
Johann Strauss I, Pariser-Polka (nach englischen Motiven), well maybe!
Josef Gung’l, Sehnsucht, Steyer’scher Oberlander, Op. 395, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 860Před 7 měsíci
Josef Gung’l, Sehnsucht, Steyer’scher Oberlander, Op. 395, Arr. CPE Strauss
Johann Strauss I, Radetzky Marsch, Op. 228
zhlédnutí 355Před 7 měsíci
Johann Strauss I, Radetzky Marsch, Op. 228
Johann Strauss I, Ball Racketen, Walzer, Op. 96
zhlédnutí 450Před 7 měsíci
Johann Strauss I, Ball Racketen, Walzer, Op. 96
Carl Faust, Auf Flügeln der Nacht, Walzer, Op. 103, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 618Před 8 měsíci
Carl Faust, Auf Flügeln der Nacht, Walzer, Op. 103, Arr. CPE Strauss
Joseph Lanner, K.K.Kammerball Tänze, Op. 177
zhlédnutí 475Před 8 měsíci
Joseph Lanner, K.K.Kammerball Tänze, Op. 177
Johann Strauss II, Fest Marsch, Op. 49, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 420Před 9 měsíci
Johann Strauss II, Fest Marsch, Op. 49, Arr. CPE Strauss
Johann Strauss II, Serail Tänze, Walzer, Op. 5, Arr. CPE Strauss
zhlédnutí 269Před 9 měsíci
Johann Strauss II, Serail Tänze, Walzer, Op. 5, Arr. CPE Strauss
Franz Morelly, Matra’s Echo, Walzer, Op. 48
zhlédnutí 311Před 10 měsíci
Franz Morelly, Matra’s Echo, Walzer, Op. 48

Komentáře

  • @leancove9662
    @leancove9662 Před 2 dny

    Thanks for this post and the history. First time I heard something from Morelly. This waltz seems quite nice with good cord progression. To me it`s not at all run of the mill. With full orchestration ,I am sure( to my ears) it is keeping up with the likes of Labitzky and Bela Keler. Keep up the good work.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 2 dny

      Thanks for your comment. I think it just depends on what you define as “run of the mill”. I’ve given the treatment to one waltz by each of Keler and Labitzky and neither has inspired me to seek out more. I have got into trouble with this before by saying that I didn’t think Eduard Strauss was a great waltz composer, so here, done in about 10 minutes flat, is my categorisation of waltz composers. I’ve restricted myself to 19th century composers who, for most of their careers at least, wrote for and led dance orchestras. I also must have spent some time with at least one of their scores. Apologies if I’ve left any important ones out or if I have insulted your favourite composer. The positions are entirely subjective and boundaries are blurred. Class 1 - People capable of writing consistently top class waltzes. If I pick up a (mature) score by any of them I would expect to see something a bit out of the ordinary. If I haven’t heard something by one of these composers recently I will play some. - Joseph Lanner, Josef Strauss, Johann Strauss II, Philipp Fahrbach I, August Lanner. Class 2 - People who write consistently good waltzes and who occasionally pull something very good out of the bag. If a piece turns up on shuffle I will listen to it but I probably would start skipping after the second or third piece. - Johann Strauss I (but maybe due a promotion), Eduard Strauss, Ziehrer, Komzak II, Waldteufel (grudgingly!). Class 3 - “Run of the mill”. Pretty, professionally written waltzes by someone who knows their business but just a bit samey. Probably skipped on the shuffle, unless I’m in the mood - Franz Morelly, Leopold Morelly, Gung’l, Labitzky, Keler, Faust, Johann Strauss III, Fetras, Philipp Fahrbach II. Class 4 - The rest. If you look at the waltz category on imslp you will find 7972 waltzes, at time of writing. These are just the ones that got published and someone thought were worth uploading to imslp. Maybe we’re missing a genius but somehow I doubt it. Sturgeon’s Law states that “All things-cars, books, cheeses, hairstyles, people and pins are, to the expert and discerning eye, crud, except for the acceptable tithe which we each happen to like.” (From Theodore Sturgeon’s “On Hand: A Book”, Venture Science Fiction, September 1957, Vol. 1, No. 5, pp. 49-50). I think it’s probably an underestimate here. Just like it seems everybody today is “in a band”, in the 19th century anyone could write a waltz. Maybe.

  • @danielricardo_lj
    @danielricardo_lj Před 7 dny

    Friedrich Ludwig Jahn ❤ Gut Heil

  • @dawnlightening
    @dawnlightening Před 11 dny

    Hypnotically beautiful! I put it on loop and listened to it for 40 or so minutes.

  • @dawnlightening
    @dawnlightening Před 11 dny

    Sounds nice Maestro. It somehow reminded me of Irish dance music, Well done!

  • @dawnlightening
    @dawnlightening Před 11 dny

    I bet young Philipp had no idea what to name this composition of his. But after an hour of fruitless deliberation, his thoughts were interrupted by the chimes of his Cuckoo clock, which serendipitously provided him with this name. There are no signs of clocks or of cuckoos in this polka until the very last couple of seconds.

  • @henkbarneveld8299
    @henkbarneveld8299 Před 17 dny

    Hoe kan ik alle muziekstukken op uw kanaal beluisteren?

  • @henkbarneveld8299
    @henkbarneveld8299 Před 17 dny

    Heel mooi!! Graag nog meer werken van Joseph Lanner. Het liefst alle werken!😂

  • @Musicaprima75
    @Musicaprima75 Před 22 dny

    Very nice work. I'd like to play some of your orchestrations in concert with my orchestra. I'd like to play some of your orchestrations in concert with my orchestra. Is it possible to obtain them? Thank you for your interest in my request.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 16 dny

      Merci pour votre commentaire. J’écris pour orchestre électronique. Il y a des partitions mais je dois faire beaucoup de changements pour que l’orchestre électronique sonne bien. Cela les rend injouables par les humains. De temps en temps, je fais des partitions imprimées et des voies pour des performances live mais c’est beaucoup de travail. Je le fais seulement si je suis sûr qu’elle sera jouée, que ce sera une bonne performance et que je pourrai peut-être venir l’entendre. Je ne suis pas un musicien professionnel. C’est un passe-temps.

  • @Musicaprima75
    @Musicaprima75 Před 22 dny

    Très bien orchestrée ! 👏🏻

  • @remistephan408
    @remistephan408 Před měsícem

    Traumhaft schön!

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před měsícem

    Lovely waltz, great upload. I have in the back of my mind that I read somewhere that Radetsky March was a collaboration between JS 1 and PF 1, but that JS 1 took all the credit, and was never corrected. Whether that has any truth, or just the result of envy or whatever, I don't know, and can't find the source anymore. Probably total rubbish, but you never know!

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před měsícem

      I doubt that's true. Fahrbach certainly did play in Strauss's orchestra earlier and claimed to have helped in the orchestration of some of Strauss's pieces. That's likely to be true and, similarly, Strauss's handwriting is to be found on scores by Lanner from the period when he played in Lanner's orchestra. By 1848 Fahrbach was an established leader of his own orchestra and is not likely to have needed the extra work, or had the time for it for that matter. ou never know though.

  • @Sokratekk
    @Sokratekk Před měsícem

    Nice and pleasant waltz. Everything by Fahrbach on your channel is a welcome suprise.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před měsícem

      I've stopped being surprised. He's just a very good composer. I'm also very impressed with the way his music adapts to changing fashions. This waltz couldn't really have been written any earlier than about 1870 and is bang up to date. He's also interesting to do because there are always "that'll never work" moments that turn out to work perfectly. I don't know why he's almost entirely forgotten. Maybe because he didn't go far from Vienna. Or perhaps he just wasn't charismatic. Certainly, when looking for piano scores, I rarely find any of his in libraries outside of central Europe, even in places where there are those of Faust, Gung'l, Labitzky etc. who are not in his class. I've never once found a published orchestral score ... and his handwriting is terrible which puts me off transcribing the manuscript scores.

  • @LoveLove-lz1cg
    @LoveLove-lz1cg Před měsícem

    Beautiful !

  • @dredejaeger682
    @dredejaeger682 Před 2 měsíci

    If you are interested I have the full orchestral score of tetras “In den Sternen Stehr Geschrieben” Walzer

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před měsícem

      Thanks for the offer but I already have a couple of sets of parts for Fetras waltzes that I haven't got around to doing. Just not enough time.

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 2 měsíci

    I am so pleased you have uploaded these 3 works by a greatly and unjustly ignored composer. One of my first memories from my younger days (late 1960s!) is his wonderful waltz "Moonlight on the Alster". Hardly heard these days, if at all. Fetras modelled himself on Johann Strauss - even down to the extravagant mutton chop side whiskers!

  • @rutgervangestel
    @rutgervangestel Před 2 měsíci

    only knew Eduards arrements!!! thanks for shareing.

  • @IGuessThisIsHello
    @IGuessThisIsHello Před 2 měsíci

    Somehow stumbled across this gem on a tangent while researching an American Victorian-era hotel. This is such an interesting piece of history! It's crazy this is so obscure given how intricate the establishment sounds like it was. This orchestration sounded amazing and as someone who knows next-to-nothing about classical music, I can only say that I am thankful to know there are people like you doing the work to resurrect older pieces.

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 2 měsíci

    I like potpourris too, which is why I like quadrilles! Also, Edward did a good potpourri of his brother's compositions - Garland of Strauss, or something like that. I can't remember properly, but I'm sure you know. I have it on Vinyl somewhere!

  • @ladymacbethofmtensk896
    @ladymacbethofmtensk896 Před 3 měsíci

    I was wondering why you share all these old, forgotten works. What drives you?

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 3 měsíci

      That's a very interesting question. I'm not sure I can answer it and, in any case, I don't want to do it here but your asking it has spawned a bout of uncharacteristic introspection. If you send me an email to cpestrauss@yahoo.com I'll let you know if I come up with anything. Two other questions: Why on earth does anybody listen to them and keep coming back for more?; What happened to the other 895 Lady Macbeths of Mtensk, or shouldn't I ask?

    • @ladymacbethofmtensk896
      @ladymacbethofmtensk896 Před 3 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740What happened to the other 895? I really don't know. Maybe permanently banned by the neo-Stalinists who moderate the comments? Or the ones who designed the algorithm to prioritize mainstream rappers and manufactured Barbie dolls like Beyonds? And let us not forget the scourge of ad interruptions that ruin many a classical work. I can be of great service to you there, along with taking your channel to the next level and bringing you greater pecuniary rewards. Perhaps I shall send you an email with some of the places that ache for your work...

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 3 měsíci

      I think one can level many criticisms at Google but neo-Stalinism is not one of them. I'm always interested in suggestions for interesting music to do. This is just a hobby though. I never take money for it. That would mean pandering to the tastes of the capitalist-imperialist bourgeoisie. From each according to his abilities, to each according to his needs. I have a bit of talent and don't need anything.

    • @ladymacbethofmtensk896
      @ladymacbethofmtensk896 Před 3 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740 It is a small niche, true, but is a very loyal one that keeps coming back for more. The mainstream stuff just gets dumped in a basement somewhere for future deportation to the Goodwill when the next thing comes along. Meanwhile, one of the only reasons I am still bothering with CZcams at all is because of channels like yours, which have not posted on other more friendly platforms. With no ads to ruin the experience. And what if the CZcams moderators should decide that they don't like what you post for whatever reason? I have seen music just disappear before, music that should be heard and shared.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 3 měsíci

      @@ladymacbethofmtensk896 I think you place more value on my work than I do. It's just a hobby. It's not a crusade or a vocation. Perhaps there is some value in the transcriptions but there is better software than Noteperformer and surely better interpreters of this kind of music than an ageing computer programmer with no musical training. The orchestrations are fun to do but with more research could be considerably improved. For me, the reward is mostly in the creation of the pieces. It is nice that some people want to hear them and even nicer to get feedback from real musicians and historians but I don't think the world would be a much poorer place if they disappeared. They're probably not all going to anyway as the best of them go to safer storage with societies and collectors.

  • @Adamov1
    @Adamov1 Před 3 měsíci

    I have listened to London Salon Orchestra recording multiple times. It is certainly not the most original or interesting waltz in history, but it has some nice melodies and is very accessible and easy to listen to even for ordinary mortals and not only hardcore listeners of rare waltzes - no wonder why Theodore Moses-Tobani used parts of it in his "Hearts and Flowers". Anyway very nice arrangement, I enjoyed listening to it a lot.

    • @DrivermanO
      @DrivermanO Před 3 měsíci

      I agree, and there are worse around too! Klemperer was not good as a composer!

    • @Adamov1
      @Adamov1 Před měsícem

      @@DrivermanO You mean his "Merry Waltz"? It's certainly no the greatest waltz ever, sounds a bit like a pastiche.

    • @DrivermanO
      @DrivermanO Před měsícem

      @@Adamov1 That's the one! I have it on tape, only recorded it because it was so awful!

  • @Adamov1
    @Adamov1 Před 3 měsíci

    Great early waltz by Ziehrer - it sounds amazing here, more lively, danceable and coherent, the original recording does not capture the full potential of this waltz and is a bit lifeless.

  • @etanesnil7072
    @etanesnil7072 Před 4 měsíci

    banger 🔥🔥

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 4 měsíci

    Once again, thank you for your super efforts. Another brilliant march! Also, to be fair, the second recording you mention is on a channel to which I subscribe, and being recorded in an an "inn" (Wirtshaus) in apparently Bavaria, its hardly surprising there's beer on the table!

  • @dredejaeger682
    @dredejaeger682 Před 5 měsíci

    The third walzer of my knowledge having this title, also ziehrer and Fetras chose this title, u can hear the fetras rendition on my Musescore “Dre de jaeger”

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 5 měsíci

    Super waltz! Its my kind of waltz too. Very jolly. I found your comments regarding the instruments interesting. My eldest daughter plays E flat clarinet in orchestra, also B flat on occasion. She also teaches clarinet - and saxophone and flute! My son-in-law plays tuba - a baby bombardon! - in an orchestra, so you see my point!

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere Před 5 měsíci

    MIDI? If so, then you've done a creditable job with it. Thanks.

  • @JoergMcFly
    @JoergMcFly Před 5 měsíci

    Does this have an "official" English title? I read about "Bird of Passage" allegedly by Faust, but not sure if this is it...

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 5 měsíci

      I don't think Faust waltzes have official English titles. American publishers usually just translated the German. This isn't Bird of Passage though. The Library of Congress has a set of parts for that waltz and it isn't the same piece. Since that publisher doesn't print the original title or the opus number, I don't know what Faust called it.

    • @JoergMcFly
      @JoergMcFly Před 5 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740 Thanks! I just had a look a that sheet music & agree. It would've been fitting, though, what with "wings" and "birds" and all...

    • @JoergMcFly
      @JoergMcFly Před 5 měsíci

      P.S. would love to hear your version of "Bird of Passage" (probably "Wandervogel" in German) if you're so inclined :)

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 5 měsíci

      There's an incomplete list of Faust works on imslp but unfortunately it doesn't include anything resembling Bird of Passage. I assume it's genuine Faust but without knowing exactly what it is I can't really work up any enthusiasm for doing it. That's highly unlikely to be Faust's orchestration either. I only know of one surviving Faust orchestration, although I'm not an expert. That looks like a generic publisher's edition. The piano part is a bit of a giveaway. Silesia was not a great place to leave your music at the end of the 19th century! Transcribing sets of parts is a chore. They've got to be genuine for me to even think about it. If a genuine piano score turned up, I'd probably get around to it. Faust is underrated and I do get requests to do more of his work.

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 5 měsíci

    I like quadrilles! A lot of them are a potpourri of famous tunes by other composers - ending with the Soldiers Chorus from Gounod's Faust here! (I think!) Excellent - why tasteless?

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 5 měsíci

      I'm not convinced Wagner would have approved of people hopping around a dance floor to a bit of The Flying Dutchman. Some operatic music works very well shoehorned into a quadrille but maybe have a think what the original composer would have thought before doing it? Having said that, I like this one, but I would love to have been a fly on the wall if Wagner had ever heard it. Perhaps he did. I think he was in Vienna at about that time.

    • @DrivermanO
      @DrivermanO Před 5 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740 They might not have liked it, but it happened a lot. I doubt Eddie asked Berlioz for permission for the Carmen Quadrille. You can't keep a good tune down!

  • @CarlMichaelZiehrer
    @CarlMichaelZiehrer Před 5 měsíci

    Orchestral Version of This Music Marien Walzer Op. 143 is performed under Conductiong of Willi Boskovsky with Wiener Johann Strauss Orchestra!

  • @antares7880
    @antares7880 Před 6 měsíci

    I like particularly the introduction, which is very interesting musically and sounds beautiful in your arrangement. My other favourite parts are the waltzes 1A and 1B as well as the transition to coda. The melody at 3:42 remains me of some Ziehrer's characteristic motifs.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      Introductions are hard. Once I get to the waltz sections I am more confident of doing something reasonable as they are written to a structure, but the composer has a free hand with the introduction and I'm never sure of what I am doing, especially if it's a composer or an era I don't know that well. Here the piano score just has the tune and the accompaniment figures that I put in the wind parts. I wouldn't bet too much that what I have done is similar to Hellmesberger but I don't think the score survives. All I can hope that it is not too anachronistic as the waltz is worth hearing.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      Re 3:42 cf Waltz 2 of Johann Strauss II’s Morgenblätter

  • @Adamov1
    @Adamov1 Před 6 měsíci

    I'm also really curious what would your list of top 10 Strauss II would look like?

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      Hah! It probably changes on a daily basis and there are lots I haven’t heard. Most of them are predictable - Künstlerleben An der schönen blauen Donau Wiener Blut Rosen aus dem Süden I like the ones where he’s not trying to be too symphonic (Not trying to compete with Josef?) so usually ones from the early 1860s - Feuilleton, Motoren (prefer the Marco Polo recording), Accelerationen, Concurrenzen. I’d add Freuet Euch des Lebens to those although it’s later Liebeslieder (first masterpiece, I like the Andre Rieu version … much to my surprise)

    • @Adamov1
      @Adamov1 Před 5 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740 Great list. I have very good rare recordings of Op. 293 and Op. 267, extremely inspired and danceable, which I will soon post on my channel. I thought that I will see Frühlingsstimmen, Wiener Bonbons or Morgenblätter on your list. Its very hard for me to pick my top 10 by Johann II, more like top 50, he composed so many dozens of masterpieces. This task is surely much easier for Johann I, Josef, Ziehrer or Eduard (my top 10 by Pepi: Mai-Rosen, Perlen der Liebe, Wiener Kinder, Hesperusbahnen, Aquarellen, Mein Lebenslauf ist Lieb' und Lust, Sphärenklänge, Herbstrosen, Delirien, Transactionen, Dorfschwalben aus Österreich, top 15 for Edi: Fesche Geister, Doctrinen, Ball-Promessen, Myrthen-Sträusschen, Manuscripte, Interpretationen, Studentenball-Tanze, Stimmen aus dem Publikum, Theorien, Aus dem Rechtsleben, Schleier und Kröne, Myrthenzauber, Glockensignale, Lustfahrten and Das Leben ist doch schön.

  • @Adamov1
    @Adamov1 Před 6 měsíci

    Great arrangement of an interesting waltz, 3:42 is probably my favorite tune from the piece but there are so many great ones in those 10 minutes. Hellmesberger II was a very good composer, I love his waltzes like "Für die ganze Welt!" and various symphonic dances and miniatures. Conductors conducting New Year's Concerts in Vienna also surely appreciate him because his works have been performed annually in Musikverein. One day I would like to hear recordings of all his waltzes and the entire ballet "Die Perlen von Iberien" - as far as I know, only a recording of a short suite from it is available.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      Re 3:42 cf Waltz 2 of Johann Strauss II’s Morgenblätter

  • @leancove9662
    @leancove9662 Před 6 měsíci

    What was a waltz composer doing in India?!

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      He was employed by the British East India Company as director of the garrison orchestra in Bombay. I don't think he had been further than Budapest before that. They paid well and it was a good orchestra too. I have read reports of his concerts in the Bombay newspapers and have details of his estate on his death and he was very well off. He spent nearly 20 years there. The estate doesn't include any music and I can't find any trace of it other than the odd piece, including Op. 250.

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 6 měsíci

    Wasn't Passe Partout the assistant of Phineas Fogg in Jules Verne's "Around the World in 80days"? Don't think its a passport! Apart from that, a jolly Eddy polka. One I haven't got. I have a gap between op186 and 198!

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      It's about the same date as the book

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

      I know it's not a passport. I was misusing the French meaning of something that let's you go anywhere. A key might have been less misleading. It had been a long day.

    • @DrivermanO
      @DrivermanO Před 6 měsíci

      @@cpestrauss8740 I thought you probably did, but I couldn't resist! I should say I always enjoy your uploads, and appreciate the effort you must expend dicovering the rarities and then preparing them. More power to your elbow - or fingers!

  • @cpestrauss8740
    @cpestrauss8740 Před 6 měsíci

    Since posting this I have learned that the complete edition recordings have a recording of this piece. The associated notes have no more evidence than I have presented concerning the provenance of the piece.

  • @joabcpp9369
    @joabcpp9369 Před 7 měsíci

    Esse é um GÊNIO da Valsa. Um intelecto admirável. Ouço e recomendo.

  • @birdlynn417
    @birdlynn417 Před 7 měsíci

    This was so beautiful, I didn't want it to end! 😊❤

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 7 měsíci

    Wonderful! Traume auf der Ozean is one of Gungl's best. I think its superb, especially the part around 4 minutes in. I think you may have done it.

  • @Sokratekk
    @Sokratekk Před 8 měsíci

    Some pretty danceable parts in this one. Pleasant suprise!

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 8 měsíci

    This is a pretty little waltz. More gentle than Strauss - Lumbye was similar.

  • @Sokratekk
    @Sokratekk Před 8 měsíci

    Some simple but nice melodies compared to this flamboyant introduction. A lovely waltz from start to finish. Thanks for presenting Lanners wonderful work and keeping his music alive.

  • @antares7880
    @antares7880 Před 9 měsíci

    I am grateful to you for your respectable work of continuing the arrangements of Johann's early dances for truly Straussian-like orchestra from around 1844. Indeed, this music should be played with a proper, lively tempo and transparent orchestration, never in the late 19th-century symphonic style. I agree that Johann's youthful waltzes must really have sounded strikingly fresh and melodic. Op. 5 is a really good composition, only the coda could be better... But even the future Waltz King did't become a master of everything at once.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 9 měsíci

      The waltz is mostly in C major. Two of the themes are in A flat and E flat. That gives him some awkward key changes in the coda as he retains the original keys and has to do some clumsy changes to get to them. Kaiserwalzer is in C major and one of the tunes in it is in A flat. That tune does not appear in the coda. We all have lessons to learn!

  • @williamuhren5639
    @williamuhren5639 Před 9 měsíci

    Carl Faust, German composer of military marchs, also well known in his home land as the waltz king!!!

  • @josedovalenetojunior6567
    @josedovalenetojunior6567 Před 10 měsíci

    Lanner tem seu estilo próprio..elegante, imponente e majestoso ..uma bela interpretação dessa orquestra...

  • @Sokratekk
    @Sokratekk Před 10 měsíci

    I can´t help, but this waltz gets better and better the more you hear it. The motives have their own dramatic dynamic, wave after wave , like an ocean that turns into a stormy sea. Maybe its time to release the CPE Strauss version of Studenten-Ball-Tänze Op. 101;-)

  • @StephenJurist-pw7by
    @StephenJurist-pw7by Před 10 měsíci

    If you add a prussian drumbeat it would be a hit

  • @StephenJurist-pw7by
    @StephenJurist-pw7by Před 10 měsíci

    If you add a prussian drumbeat it would be hit!

  • @paulslack7298
    @paulslack7298 Před 10 měsíci

    This is just a wonderful waltz and I gleaned some valuable information in the comment below. Thanks so much for giving the lovers of C.M. Ziehrer's music material we have never heard before!

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 11 měsíci

    Super! Thank you. I haven't got a recording of this march - its a cracker!

  • @DrivermanO
    @DrivermanO Před 11 měsíci

    I think von Suppe is a vasstly underrated composer. He effectively invented operetta - I think Das Pensionat was his first. His music, like this polka, is very tuneful. The marches are super - Bocaccio, Uber berg, uber Tal, in der Hinterbruhl, and a lot of others - O du, mein Osterreich probably the most famous. Waltzes too. I have recordings of about 90 overtures, marches and waltzes. I have an orchestral recording of this polka, played at a slightly more stately pace! Slovak SPO under Christian Pollack.

    • @cpestrauss8740
      @cpestrauss8740 Před 11 měsíci

      That's about the same number I have heard. Where's the rest? I can understand no recordings but very few piano scores? Usually someone with such a famous name will have plenty of scores on the main digital sites but there's really very little about.