Presents

Ludwig van Beethoven

 Symphony No.2 in D Major, Op.36

Arranged for Violin, Violoncello and Piano

Soundbite 1st Movement-Adagio-Allegro con brio

Soundbite 2nd Movement-Larghetto quasi andante

Soundbite 3rd Movement-Scherzo

Soundbite 4th Movement-Allegro molto

What??? Who would do such a thing and why?? Hold your horses....Beethoven himself arranged his Symphony No.2 for Piano Trio. For the first half of the 19th century, arranging large scale works for chamber music ensembles was a common practice. Why? Because after the French Revolution, European governments were highly suspicious of large gatherings of men and discouraged them by means of police surveillance, fearing revolutionary plotting. And, of course, it took a large group of men to rehearse and perform a symphony. Add to this that a huge new market for chamber music came into existence about this time as home music making became one of the most popular pastimes for the emerging bourgeois classes of Western Europe. Both composers and publishers, with an eye toward profits, made a regular practice of having chamber music arrangements made of large scale works by well-known composers. Beethoven was disappointed at the reception his second symphony, composed in 1802, received and noticed that it was rarely performed. Added to this was the offer made by the Bureau des arts et d'Industrie a prominent Vienna publisher for a chamber music arrangement of the symphony, led to him producing the trio.

 

You might think that turning a symphony into a piano trio would be a hopeless task with the result being highly unsatisfactory, but you would be wrong, especially when the arranger was Beethoven himself. What he produced is truly amazing and in someways more impressive than the symphony itself. That this is so is testified to by the fact that of all of his piano trios, this one was one of the most frequently performed right up until the First World War when the practice of playing large works in chamber music arrangement was no longer popular.

 

Not readily available, we are pleased to offer it in a modern edition and believe both professionals and amateurs will find it a very satsifying work. And in the concert hall, it is sure to make a strong impression.

 

Parts: $29.95

 

              

 

Catalogue

Contact Us

Links

Search Place Order What's New