Enescu, to me, was the eighth wonder of the world - a true master of all trades, but most of all an unparalleled composer. Two great recordings of his op.6 sonata, written at 17, come to mind: He played the violin part with Dinu Lipatti and the piano part with Yvonne Astruc.
4 года назад+27
In any way or another, a man must be a genius to be able to construct such a marvel and at such age. In no moment can you feel the "strings" (no pun intended) slipping from his fingers, yet it's a constant push of the limits of perception towards chaotic. There is a persistent underlying impetus that makes this piece a three-quarters-of-hour rollercoaster race towards it's end while savagely enjoying the slopes and strokes of poetry and romanticism.
The more I listen to Enescu's Octet, the more amazed I am with its virtuosity. For me, this is a very special piece of music, a composition that is on another level, created by a genius.
I am actually bowled over by how good this is. For years Mendelssohn and Raff have been my only (string) octet fixes; fantastic to have something new to add to this niche collection!
@@klop4228 Thanks for the recommendations; I think I've heard the Bruch (and didn't love it) but the Shostakovich sounds intriguing. I'll check them out asap!
the second moviment is just a perfection of chamber music, he must had an immense engagement, boldness , inspiration and abundance composing this. I guess he started this as a quartet then complicated later
This is beautiful! I've long been a fan of Enescu's Romanian Rhapsodies, but hadn't heard much of his other work. Thanks for sharing (and for including the score - always a bonus)!
@@zeenohaquo7970 also, i said somewhere that he composed a quartet over other quartet so to say, this would be the easiest way to handle the confusion. I guess the bass alone would make it static and less homogeneous
@@emanuel_soundtrack you mean this started as a standard string quartet then an "accompaniment" or compliment quartet was written for it? interesting! in that case, yes, a sole contrabass would make it non-homogeneous.
oh, man, he's hammering so fiercely against the wall of tonality. soone should have lent him a sledge hammer. janine at her very best (as always :D) thx 4 sharing, such an inspiring work!!
+chris ingres Thank you! Yes it's an unashamedly exciting piece, but so very well crafted too! I'm glad you like it, and yes Janine is wonderful in this :)
yes, i like it indeed. i thought about that piece often te recent days. mahler 9, "verklärte nacht", the octet by enescu: all 3 composers were standing at the brink, glancing down at the abyss beneath them. their music is very close to the point of total collapse. mahler died. schönberg jumped - and became one of the world's most underestimated composers for a long term, enescu stayed (?).
chris ingres Enescu lived a life of poverty, he had to give music lessons etc. while all he really wanted in life was to compose music. I think Enescu is nowadays one of the great underestimated composers, Schönberg and Mahler are both well-established by now (deservedly).
maybe. i will listen to some more music by enescu. i only know the romanian rhapsody. his life: i 'm not familiar with his biography - except the fact he was a fantastic violinist. - it is and always was very difficult for many artists to earn their living. dubuffet did some forgeries when he was young, that's the clever way for painters, isn't it?.-- btw: i think we are standing at the brink again. that's what's interests me most. many people just don't see, they are blind-folded - or even worse: they are not blind-folded but they just don't w a n t to see anything. but did the elite and the people in 1910+ foresee the near collapse of the system? they wouldn't have gone in that cruel war singing and laughing. some famous artists among the soldiers (aren't the artists often called the seismographs of society??). the 20th century is so incredibly cruel, it was cruel to many artists too, mankind only survived by accident until now. i hope we'll have good luck the next decades. -- i just say good-bye. i'll be back for sure in some months when there's more time for me again...
I have to ask - it says in the description that the themes in the first movement "are not so much developed [...] as they are fragmented and recombined". I've seen this kind of thing in other places as well. Is fragmentation and recombination not a fairly common method for development? It seems to me that without fragmentation a lot of development sections would be fairly boring as the entire theme would have to be repeated every time. Recombination is less required, but still fairly common in development sections.
This is Enescu's music language : fragmenting,diverting and recombining music cells and figures . Listen,for example ,to his piano sonata no 1,or to the symphony no 2 ( that's a really hard piece to understand; i suggest you listen to it a couple times before developing a opinion) and symphony 3 . Also,the greatest of Enescu's music is in his chamber music works (and in his opera , Oedip) : Violin sonatas, piano sonatas and quartets. You may consider him a " modernist" after hearing some of the pieces, but please consider the fact that his musis has a unique language : be patient with it,and do your best to familiarize yourself to it :D. You'll then understand Enescu, and you will cannot live without him and his music anymore.
( also, as a fact, his Rhapsodies became a burden for him and he began to hate them ,because they were concealing his other composition. You should NOT characterise Enescu after his Rhapsody. First,listen to his really important works. :) )
This is the 2nd time I have listened to this and its just as indigestible as the first hearing. Beyond his Rhapsodies and very fine suites for orchestra I'm afraid Enescu is quite beyond me. Nevertheless this performance is completely stunning. Very difficult music indeed from a 19 year old. Good God!
His music is the perfect marriage of Wagner and Brahms build on a foundation based on Bach. This Octect is not even half as complicated as some of the stuff he wrote later in life.
How can something be so classical, so romantic, yet so contemporary?!?! IMPOSSIBLE!!!!
... this composition is absolutely brilliant ... to say that Enescu was a genius would be the understatement of the century ...
Enescu, to me, was the eighth wonder of the world - a true master of all trades, but most of all an unparalleled composer. Two great recordings of his op.6 sonata, written at 17, come to mind: He played the violin part with Dinu Lipatti and the piano part with Yvonne Astruc.
In any way or another, a man must be a genius to be able to construct such a marvel and at such age. In no moment can you feel the "strings" (no pun intended) slipping from his fingers, yet it's a constant push of the limits of perception towards chaotic. There is a persistent underlying impetus that makes this piece a three-quarters-of-hour rollercoaster race towards it's end while savagely enjoying the slopes and strokes of poetry and romanticism.
The more I listen to Enescu's Octet, the more amazed I am with its virtuosity. For me, this is a very special piece of music, a composition that is on another level, created by a genius.
You should listen to the Mendelssohn String octet then, he wrote it when he was 16.
10:16 THIS MOMENT IS TOO PERFECT
George Enescu:C-dúr Oktett Op.7
1.Molto moderato 00:10
2.Molto infuocato 12:24
3.Lentamente 20:31
4. Movimento valse dal ritmo incalzante 29:37
Janine Jansen-hegedű
Boris Brovtsyn-hegedű
Julia-Maria Kretz-hegedű
Alexander Sitkovetsky-hegedű
Amihai Grosz-brácsa
Julian Rachlin-brácsa
Maarten Jansen-gordonka
Jens Peter Maintz-gordonka
Nice reminescence of Schubert's string quintet at the very end :)
Not too many such octets around. This is a worthy addition to that small body of work.
Listening to this a second time on 17 September 2017
Yes it is! Happy that you like it Harry :)
I have listen this extraordinary octet in the Conservatory of Cluj in 2018. Unforgettable moment !
I am actually bowled over by how good this is. For years Mendelssohn and Raff have been my only (string) octet fixes; fantastic to have something new to add to this niche collection!
D'you know the two short ones by Shostakovich? Also fantastic.
Bruch has a rather nice one too
@@klop4228 Thanks for the recommendations; I think I've heard the Bruch (and didn't love it) but the Shostakovich sounds intriguing. I'll check them out asap!
@@vaclavmiller8032 check out the one by gliere
where has this been all my life?!
Movement two slaps so hard. This rocks
the last phrase says very clear that he loves what is strange! and does this perfectly.
This is the best octet
Very cool to put the advancing score up! Thank you, great performance of a great work and a helpful video reference too. :-)
+Films by Diek Thank you! I agree, this is such a great work, glad to see you like it too!
the second moviment is just a perfection of chamber music, he must had an immense engagement, boldness , inspiration and abundance composing this. I guess he started this as a quartet then complicated later
Master of the masters.❤
This is beautiful! I've long been a fan of Enescu's Romanian Rhapsodies, but hadn't heard much of his other work. Thanks for sharing (and for including the score - always a bonus)!
That moment when you make a fricken OCTET and the double base still doesn't get included.. poor double bases
he wants agility
@@emanuel_soundtrack Bru, Bottesini
maybe it's because this was written for 2 standard string quartet ensembles? just my guess.
@@zeenohaquo7970 also, i said somewhere that he composed a quartet over other quartet so to say, this would be the easiest way to handle the confusion. I guess the bass alone would make it static and less homogeneous
@@emanuel_soundtrack you mean this started as a standard string quartet then an "accompaniment" or compliment quartet was written for it? interesting! in that case, yes, a sole contrabass would make it non-homogeneous.
oh, man, he's hammering so fiercely against the wall of tonality. soone should have lent him a sledge hammer.
janine at her very best (as always :D) thx 4 sharing, such an inspiring work!!
+chris ingres Thank you! Yes it's an unashamedly exciting piece, but so very well crafted too! I'm glad you like it, and yes Janine is wonderful in this :)
yes, i like it indeed. i thought about that piece often te recent days. mahler 9, "verklärte nacht", the octet by enescu: all 3 composers were standing at the brink, glancing down at the abyss beneath them. their music is very close to the point of total collapse. mahler died. schönberg jumped - and became one of the world's most underestimated composers for a long term, enescu stayed (?).
chris ingres
Enescu lived a life of poverty, he had to give music lessons etc. while all he really wanted in life was to compose music. I think Enescu is nowadays one of the great underestimated composers, Schönberg and Mahler are both well-established by now (deservedly).
maybe. i will listen to some more music by enescu. i only know the romanian rhapsody. his life: i 'm not familiar with his biography - except the fact he was a fantastic violinist. - it is and always was very difficult for many artists to earn their living. dubuffet did some forgeries when he was young, that's the clever way for painters, isn't it?.-- btw: i think we are standing at the brink again. that's what's interests me most. many people just don't see, they are blind-folded - or even worse: they are not blind-folded but they just don't w a n t to see anything. but did the elite and the people in 1910+ foresee the near collapse of the system? they wouldn't have gone in that cruel war singing and laughing. some famous artists among the soldiers (aren't the artists often called the seismographs of society??). the 20th century is so incredibly cruel, it was cruel to many artists too, mankind only survived by accident until now. i hope we'll have good luck the next decades. -- i just say good-bye. i'll be back for sure in some months when there's more time for me again...
Enescu was Menuhin's teacher and mentor
Just brilliant!!
Yes I agree!!
The third movement is surreal
38:03 JA!
Love that!
this piece is very unique and requires full attention, would like to study it very well. It has the vibe of Schoenberg , Webern and Strauss
34:30
I have to ask - it says in the description that the themes in the first movement "are not so much developed [...] as they are fragmented and recombined". I've seen this kind of thing in other places as well. Is fragmentation and recombination not a fairly common method for development? It seems to me that without fragmentation a lot of development sections would be fairly boring as the entire theme would have to be repeated every time. Recombination is less required, but still fairly common in development sections.
What you say makes sense to me too. If those things don't count as development, exactly what does?
This is Enescu's music language : fragmenting,diverting and recombining music cells and figures . Listen,for example ,to his piano sonata no 1,or to the symphony no 2 ( that's a really hard piece to understand; i suggest you listen to it a couple times before developing a opinion) and symphony 3 . Also,the greatest of Enescu's music is in his chamber music works (and in his opera , Oedip) : Violin sonatas, piano sonatas and quartets. You may consider him a " modernist" after hearing some of the pieces, but please consider the fact that his musis has a unique language : be patient with it,and do your best to familiarize yourself to it :D. You'll then understand Enescu, and you will cannot live without him and his music anymore.
( also, as a fact, his Rhapsodies became a burden for him and he began to hate them ,because they were concealing his other composition. You should NOT characterise Enescu after his Rhapsody. First,listen to his really important works. :) )
This is the 2nd time I have listened to this and its just as indigestible as the first hearing. Beyond his Rhapsodies and very fine suites for orchestra I'm afraid Enescu is quite beyond me. Nevertheless this performance is completely stunning. Very difficult music indeed from a 19 year old. Good God!
His music is the perfect marriage of Wagner and Brahms build on a foundation based on Bach. This Octect is not even half as complicated as some of the stuff he wrote later in life.
And to think that he wrote this BEFORE his Romanian Rhapsody??
the description is very good, who wrote?
The person who runs the YT channel, probably.
A very nice work, but you can still sense him searching for his voice. The influence of Strauss is strong.
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