Symphony No. 10 in D Major, Franz Joseph Haydn, Downtown Sinfonietta
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- Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024
- Symphony No. 10 in D Major
Hob. 1:10 (1760)
Franz Joseph Haydn (1732-1809)
I Allegro; II Andante @ 5:52; III Finale:Presto @ 9:42
Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of
Downtown Sinfonietta
Vincent Lionti, conductor
Downtown Music at Grace
White Plains, New York
June 1, 2016
Violin: Yurika Mok, Derek Ratzenboeck, Sheghua Hu, Edita Orlinyte
Viola: Mary Hammann, Chihiro Fukuda
Violoncello: David Heiss, David Calhoun
Contrabasso: David Romano
Oboe: Hsuan-Fong Chen, Phillip Raskin
Horn: Katie Jordan, Jasmine Lavariega
One of my favorite early Haydn symphonies. The melodies are all so catchy and brilliant!
I always enjoy the performances of Haydn symphonies by the Downtown Sinfonietta very much. Thank You !
You don't hear this one often, I think it predates No6, which reveals faults in Hoboken catalogue, not interested in when, mainly what.
Nice symphony and performance, the father of symphony Franz Joseph Haydn
beethomozart
I agree, and it’s great to hear this symphony played by a small chamber orchestra like this - it really works.
Got to just mention the silly ‘father of the symphony’* bit though - it’s complete nonsense - and only survives because people keep repeating it.
Linking Haydn to the paternity of the form can only be done by ignoring every single known fact about the origins of the symphony.
There were hundreds of symphonies written before Haydn from about 1740 by composers such as Sammartini in Milan, Wagenseil and Monn in Vienna, and as just one particularly important example - Mannheim, where Richter, Holzbauer, Fils, were all writing symphonies, and most importantly, Johann Stamitz wrote over 60 modern Classical symphonies and died in 1757
Haydn’s wrote his *first* symphony in 1757 - the year Stamitz died: paternity fraud.
Haydn’s name is Joseph Haydn.
The baptismal name Franz is as redundant and silly as referring to Mozart as Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgang Theophilus Mozart; these baptismal names were never used during the lifetime of either composer - except on their baptismal certificates - and they should not be used today.
* Belief in a ‘Father of the Symphony’ is as daft as believing in ‘Father Christmas’ - there is about as much evidence for the existence of one as there is of the other.
@@elaineblackhurst1509 👏👏👏
Nice performance