Kyung Wha Chung plays Berg Violin Concerto (1974)
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- Опубликовано: 6 фев 2025
- Kyung-Wha Chung plays Alban Berg violin concerto with RTE Orchestra (Now, National Orchestra) under the baton of Colman Pearce.
This concert took place at St Patrick's College in Dublin, Ireland in 1974.
I. Andante - Allegro 0:02
II. Allegro - Adagio 13:00
a spectacular and magnificent performance
Miss Chung was only 26 when she played this work with much assurity. She is now 71 and having now returned to concertising to our benefit..
So dificult, so kind and beatifull...!!!
A very passionate reading. Her personal choice to ignore all the pianissimo markings, but it works for me. Compare Pogostkina also on RUclips..
several points to clear; Alban Berg is Austrian and died before the time of Nazi camps (thought might have saw the rise of Nazi party at the end of his life). Nazis didn't like avant gard art and famously condemned them as 'degenerate'. So I think it's neither fair nor correct to say Berg's music signifies anything related to Nazi. ; Mahler's music isn't atonal.
I want to put music into words. Do not say this is not possible. It is.
But one needs to find the right words. Create a song with words, to make it more real, powerfull and irresistable. :D
Oh no....... don't ... !
While I can see how you might feel that way about atonal music, I honestly don't understand your comment about Mahler. I am not even a huge Mahler fan, but the emotional content is very obvious (if anything the difficulty for me is that there is too much emoting in it)
Ah, it is a long, protracted agony about dying!
What a self pitty.
... hätte ich gerne mal von NIGEL KENNEDY interpretiert!!! ...🙃
My question is: how can one like atonal music? The same goes for the Mahler symphonies.
What is it about? What does it express?
Oh dear, you have much to learn. Think of tonal music as cotton candy. Atonal music would be sun-dried tomatoes with wine. Let go of the sweets a bit.
Tomás Borralho Well said. It only sounds atonal until you get accustomed to it. It takes you to another dimension of reality...
This is atonal, meaning the atmosphere of a Nazi extermination camp. Like Mahler.
The composer is to blame!