Ferdinand Ries - Piano Trio No. 1, Op. 2 (1807)
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- čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
- Ferdinand Ries (28 November 1784 [baptised] - 13 January 1838) was a German composer. Ries was a friend, pupil and secretary of Ludwig van Beethoven. He composed eight symphonies, a violin concerto, eight piano concertos, three operas, and numerous other works in many genres, including 26 string quartets. In 1838 he published a collection of reminiscences of his teacher Beethoven, co-written with Franz Wegeler. The symphonies, some chamber works -most of them with piano- his violin concerto and his piano concertos have been recorded, demonstrating a style which is, unsurprising due to his connection to Beethoven, somewhere between those of the Classical and early Romantic eras.
Piano Trio No.1 in E-flat major, Op. 2 (1804, Bonn)
Dedication: Monsieur le Comte de Baronne Brigadier au Service de S. M. J. de toutes les Russies
I. Adagio con moto - Allegro (0:00)
II. Andante un poco allegretto (12:22)
III. Rondeau. Allegro (20:22)
Mendelssohn Trio Berlin - Hudba
Ferdinand Ries was almost an "second Beethoven"... A genius very underrated, and one of the most underrated chamber pieces! 🎶
A rare combination of a great composition, *beautiful* handwritten score conveniently presented in the video, and a fantastic, energetic performance and true realization of this fine piece.
Wonderful work on behalf of all involved in this presentation, and also refreshing to hear works of these fine yet quite obscure composers!
Ries has composed very fine chamber music, for example his piano quintet in g. Thanks for this piano trio.
thanks to the internet all of this wonderful music is now available - the question is where to begin...
You picked a fine place to begin.
MOZART PIANO CONCERTO 20 IN D MINOR
Any of Ries's chamber music with a piano in it is just wonderful! He was an early romantic--a class of composer that we have ignored in the past. He composed piano trios, piano quartets, and an piano quintet. All are first rate music that should be played in the top concert halls. Alas we are fixated on big names such as Beethoven and Mozart, so Ries is only available in a few recordings.
Delizioso questo trio, grazie
Beautiful playing of a lovely piece of music.
Thanks for uploading and revealing this charming creation. ❤️🎹🎻🎼🎵🎶👏☘️🇮🇪
Estupendo
Discovering Ries, and being aware of the OVERWHELMING QUANTITY of his works - I am therefore asking myself if I can ever listen to all of his works so many times that they become entrenched in my memory?
Nice
Gracias
Ries trios are equal to those of Schubert, also Hummel a Rejchas trios beautiful also. What a put trios by Ries, Rejcha, and Hummel are not played often
Put shd read pity
I think that the main theme in the second movement is based on a variation on Beethoven's second movement from Kreutzer sonata 💖
Grande intelligenza compositiva: non sfigura affatto davanti a molte opere da camera giovanili di Beethoven e Mendelssohn. Grazie per la condivisione ! Notate una cosa interessante: nella sezione intermedia in minore del bellissimo Rondeau (circa dal minuto 23:30) viene ripetutamente citata, sebbene con ritmo differente (quaternario anziché ternario) il frammento tematico del terzo movimento della Sonata n 17 (la Tempesta) di Beethoven, composta 5 anni prima di questo Trio ...
Mr Bartmans, are you going to upload his Symphony no 6 by any chance? I'm just waiting for the Menuetto which is a special piece for me. Thank you for your work.
There is no score available of that work I am sorry to say.
@@bartjebartmans Ah, I was afraid there is no score anywhere. A few years ago I looked for it everywhere but to no avail. Seems like it's still hard to get. Thanks for the reply.
Ries's 6th symphony is a fine one. CPO record label has a recording of it with Howard Griffiths conducting. It used to be on You Tube but it was taken down.
@@brianknapp8645 Yep, this was the recording I've heard (I wonder why there are so few good recordings of his symphonies). It was still on Spotify when I last checked (last week).
@@LukS626 His symphonies are too similar to those of Beethoven. The classical music world is deeply offended by composers such as Ries who were so strongly influenced by Beethoven. They see it as sacrilege to imitate Beethoven who is the god of music to them. Also the general public doesn't care about obscure composers such as Ries so his music is not programmed in concert halls or recorded as much as Ries deserves.
Gran compositor injustamente poco tocado.
Why do I hear spring sonata in this piece😂
1229龍貓 where
Joy Long Chan I just think that the first movement is so similar to spring sonata first movement 😂🙈
Perhaps because he admired Beethoven very much!! 🎶☺️
Hope that maybe Napoleon will head home and not play around in Austria any more,
Heavily influenced by Mozart..and not very original
So Ries was one of very few students Beethoven had, he also studied with Czerny and Albrechtsberger, had his first public piano performance in 1804 with Beethoven's 3rd piano concerto, with glowing reviews, for which Ludwig allowed (!!) him to write the cadenzas, became his secretary and copyist furthermore was instrumental getting his Eroica performed etc. etc. Now the question is, what are you bringing to the table Mr. Pasha? Right, nothing.I wonder if you can even play one page from this trio.
@@bartjebartmans Right. There were and are worse composers to be influenced by than Mozart. I know how easy and predictable this kind of music seems. Till the moment when one tries to write sth comparable. Then it is really difficult.
If by "Mozart", you mean Beethoven, then, yes, he's heavily influenced by Mozart.
Influenced by Beethoven's works from the 18th century, which were instrumental in the teaching of his pupils. This was also a time when Beethoven was heavily influenced by Mozart.
Never met a composer who wasn't influenced by anybody. How the heck is that even possible?