Emilie Mayer - String Quartet in G minor

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  • čas přidán 27. 04. 2024
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    Emilie Mayer (1812-1883)
    String Quartet in G minor, Op.14
    I. Allegro appassionato [00:00]
    II. Scherzo. Allegro assai - Un poco più lento [11:46]
    III. Adagio con molta espressione [14:59]
    IV. Allegro molto [22:05]
    Performers: • Mayer: Symphony No. 4,...
    Score from: imslp.org/wiki/String_Quartet...)
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Komentáře • 12

  • @bensilverman9105
    @bensilverman9105 Před 3 lety +11

    She is a lost great composer

  • @petersturmey2789
    @petersturmey2789 Před 2 lety +3

    This is a beautiful and well constructed work. This composer is well worth following up on. I liked the symphony #1 also.

  • @fransmeersman2334
    @fransmeersman2334 Před 3 lety +8

    I was searching for music by Amanda Maier but found this magnificent string quartet by EMILIE MAYER. A very fine discovery ! Thanks.

  • @pawelpap9
    @pawelpap9 Před rokem +1

    Nice easy music, but not for repeated listening. I prefer her piano concerto in B.

  • @StanleyGrill
    @StanleyGrill Před 3 lety +19

    Needless to say, if Emilie Mayer had been a man, this quartet would be in the repertoire of nearly any string quartet performing the romantic literature.

    • @pawelpap9
      @pawelpap9 Před rokem

      Try to judge art on its merits, not based on secondary features of the artist.

    • @lukefowler9740
      @lukefowler9740 Před 19 dny

      I doubt it. Emilie Mayer was relatively widely received in her time and had a successful career as a composer during her lifetime. Her works fell out of popularity on their own merit, being highly conservative even by standards of her time. The only reason that they have been revived and recorded in recent years is precisely because they were written by a woman and not a man.

    • @StanleyGrill
      @StanleyGrill Před 19 dny

      Of course everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but I posted my comment based on my opinion of the worthiness of this composition. Seeing this on a program would be a far greater inducement for me to attend than any of dozens of quartets that I see repeated endlessly on programs and of which there are hundreds if not thousands of recordings, despite being no better than this one.

    • @lukefowler9740
      @lukefowler9740 Před 19 dny

      ​@@StanleyGrillthat's more to do with the idolisation of a relatively small number of composers. The only correlation with gender is that the majority of composers in the 19th century were male. There are plenty of compositions by male composers that have been neglected and fallen out of the concert repertoire that I'm sure you'd love if you heard them.

    • @StanleyGrill
      @StanleyGrill Před 19 dny

      @@lukefowler9740 That's true enough. Personally, as example, I'm not a big Mendelssohn fan, other than a handful of works of his, yet his works, good and bad, are constantly programmed and recorded. And there is a long list of overlooked male composers from that period. Gernsheim immediately springs to mind - and the oversight of his music is probably primarily due to the mistake of his being born Jewish (and not hiding it) in Germany. All that said, I do find that whatever the sparsity of women composers there have been, Mayer is not the only one who wrote music of worth that has been overlooked. I don't think the impact of centuries of belief that no woman could produce anything of worth can be simply ignored.