Vienna Philharmonic
Author of Symphony No. 7 [sound recording]
About the Author
Works by Vienna Philharmonic
Symphony No. 7 [sound recording] (1994) — Performed By; Orchestra, some editions — 124 copies, 1 review
Janáček : Jenůfa {sound recording} {1982 Mackerras/Vienna Philharmonic/Söderström} (1982) — Orchestra — 13 copies, 1 review
New Year's Concert 1987 • Wiener Philharmoniker [sound recording] {Karajan} (1987) — Orchestra; Orchestra — 11 copies
Janáček : The Makropulos case + Lachian Dances {sound recording} {1978 Mackerras/Wiener Philharmoniker} (1970) — Orchestra [Makropulos] — 10 copies
Strauss : Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1968) — Orchestra — 7 copies
Strauss : Alpine symphony + Don Juan + Hero's life + Thus spoke Zarathustra + Till Eulenspiegel's merry pranks {sound recording} (1994) — Orchestra — 5 copies
New Year's Concert 1990 • Wiener Philharmoniker — Orchestra — 4 copies
Janáček : Jenůfa {sound recording} {1982 Mackerras /Vienna Philharmonic/Söderström} (1982) — Orchestra; Orchestra, some editions — 4 copies
Holst : The planets {sound recording} {1961 Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1961) — Orchestra — 4 copies
Mozart - Don Giovanni (Disc 2) 3 copies
Boulez : Notations I-IV + Ligeti : Atmosphères + Lontano + Nono : Liebeslied + Rihm : Départ {sound recording} (1988) — Orchestra — 3 copies
Best of Neujahrskonzert 3 copies
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {1987 Previn/Vienna Philharmonic} (1987) — Orchestra — 3 copies
Janáček : The Cunning Little Vixen + From the House of the Dead + Jenůfa + Káťa Kabanová + The Makropulos Affair + Sinfonietta + Taras Bulba… (1976) — Orchestra — 3 copies
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Salome : Dance + Till Eulenspiegel {sound recording} (1960) — Performer — 2 copies
Strauss : Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {1959 Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1959) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Don Juan + Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {1959/1960 Karajan/ Vienna Philharmonic} (1959) — Orchesra — 2 copies
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Don Juan {sound recording} {Maazel /Vienna Philharmonic} — Orchestra — 2 copies
Holst : The planets {sound recording} {1961 Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1961) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.7 in A major, op.92 {sound recording} {Solti/Vienna Philharmonic} — Orchestra — 2 copies
Borodin : Prince Igor : Polovtsian dances + Symphony no.2 {sound recording} {Kubelik/Vienna Philharmonic} — Orchestra — 2 copies
Tchaikovsky : Nutcracker Op.71a {suite} + Sleeping Beauty {suite} + Swan Lake {suite} {sound recording} {1961/1965 Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1961) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Rimsky-Korsakov : Scheherazade {sound recording} {Previn/Vienna Philharmonic} (1981) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Mendelssohn : The Hebrides + A Midsummer Night's Dream : incidental music, op.61 + Symphony no.4 in A major 'Italian', op.90 {sound recording} {1978 Dohnányi} (1978) — Orchestra [Hebrides; Symphony no.4] — 2 copies
Strauss : Macbeth + Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {1983 Maazel/Vienna Philharmonic} (1983) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Neujahrskonzert 2025 2 copies
Strauss : Don Juan + Salome : Dance + Thus spoke Zarathustra + Till Eulenspiegel's merry pranks {sound recording} {Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic} (1959) — Orchestra, some editions; Orchestra — 2 copies
Vienna Philharmonic 150th Anniversay, Vol. 12 (XII) Wagner: Siegfried: Waldweben / Gotterdämmerung: Trauermarsch / Schubert: Symphony No 9, D. 944 — Orchestra — 1 copy
Can Can: Berühmte Tänze & Ballettszenen [sound recording] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {Krauss/Vienna Philharmonic} — Orchestra — 1 copy
Verdi: Rigoletto [Disc 2] (Domingo) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Verdi: Rigoletto [Disc 1] (Domingo) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss (R): Die Frau Ohne Schatten [Disc 3] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Rossini : Cinderella {video recording} {1988 Chailly/Vienna Philharmonic} (1988) — Orchestra — 1 copy
New Year's Concert 2007 • Wiener Philharmoniker — Orchestra — 1 copy
Puccini : Tosca {sound recording} {1962 Karajan/Vienna Philharmonic/Price} (1962) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Don Juan + Rosenkavalier {excerpts} + Thus spoke Zarathustra + Till Eulenspiegel's merry pranks {sound recording} — Orchestra [Don Juan, Till Eulenspiegel] — 1 copy
Borodin : In the steppes of Central Asia + Price Igor : Overture + Polovtsian Dances + Symphony no 2 + Mussorgsky: Night on Bald Mountain + Khovanshchina : Dance of the Persian… (1958) — Orchestra [symphony]; Orchestra [Borodin symphony] — 1 copy
Blacher : Paganini variations + Elgar: Enigma variations + Kodály : Peacock variations {sound recording} (1997) — Orchestra — 1 copy
New Year's Concert 1979 • Wiener Philharmoniker — Orchestra — 1 copy
Il Trovatore 1 copy
Strauss (R): Die Frau Ohne Schatten [Disc 1] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss (R): Die Frau Ohne Schatten [Disc 2] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.9 in D minor, op.125 'Choral' {video recording} {1979 Bernstein/Wiener Philharmoniker} (1979) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Four last songs + Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} — Orchestra [Four last songs] — 1 copy
Strauss : Hero's life + Thus spoke Zarathustra {sound recording} {Krauss/Vienna Philharmonic} (2000) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Elgar : Enigma variations + In the south + Introduction and allegro + Sospiri {sound recording} (2002) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Don Juan + Four last songs + Till Eulenspiegel {sound recording} {Furtwängler/Vienna Philharmonic, Ackermann/Philharmonia/Schwarzkopf} — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Don Juan + Till Eulenspiegel {sound recording} {1950/1954 Furtwängler/Vienna Philharmonic} (1950) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Brahms : Hungarian Dances + Dvorak : Slavonic Dances + Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Till Eulenspielgel {sound recording} — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Death & transfiguration {sound recording} {1957 Reiner/Vienna Philharmonic} (1957) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Mendelssohn : The Hebrides + A Midsummer Night's Dream : incidental music, op.61 {sound recording} {Previn; Davis} — Orchestra [Midsummer night's dream] — 1 copy
Mendelssohn : The Hebrides + A Midsummer Night's Dream : incidental music, op.61 + Ruy Blas + Symphony no.4 in A major 'Italian', op.90 {sound recording} — Orchestra [Hebrides; symphony] — 1 copy
Sibelius # 1 copy
Elgar : Enigma Variations + Holst : The planets {sound recording} {1958/1961 Monteux, Karajan} (1958) — Orchestra [The Planets] — 1 copy
New Year's concert 1996 1 copy
Strauss : Death and transfiguration + Till Eulenspiegel {sound recording} {1956 Reiner} (1956) — Performer — 1 copy
Associated Works
Puccini : Madama Butterfly [sound recordings] (1904) — Orchestra, some editions — 255 copies, 1 review
Brahms : A German Requiem, op. 45 {sound recordings} (2017) — orchestra, some editions — 202 copies, 4 reviews
Mozart : Symphony no.40 in G minor, K550 + Symphony no.41 in C major 'Jupiter', K551 {sound recordings} (1999) — Orchestra, some editions — 194 copies, 1 review
Tchaikovsky : Symphony no.6 in B minor, Op.74 [sound recording] (1998) — Orchestra, some editions — 165 copies, 4 reviews
Mahler: Symphony no.9 in D major [sound recording] (2010) — Orchestra, some editions — 163 copies, 2 reviews
Symphony no. 2 in C minor, ''Resurrection'' (sound recording) (2011) — Orchestra, some editions — 159 copies, 2 reviews
Má Vlast (My Fatherland / My Homeland / My Country) [sound recording] (1994) — Artists, some editions — 126 copies, 3 reviews
Strauss : Salome [sound recordings] (1972) — Orchestra, some editions; Orchestra, some editions — 90 copies, 2 reviews
Bruckner : Symphony no.8 in C minor {original version} [sound recording] (1994) — some editions; Orchestra, some editions — 88 copies, 1 review
Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' [sound recordings] (1993) — Orchestra, some editions — 86 copies
Mozart: The 5 Violin Concertos [unspecified sound recording] (2001) — Orchestra, some editions — 73 copies
Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92 + Symphony No. 8 in F major, Op. 93 [sound recording] (1999) — Orchestra, some editions — 56 copies
Symphony No. 38 in D Major, K. 504, "Prague" & Symphony No. 39 in E flat Major, K. 543 [sound recording] (1990) — Artists, some editions — 44 copies, 2 reviews
Symphony No. 1 in C major, Op. 21 + Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, Op. 55 'Eroica' [sound recording] (2006) — Orchestra, some editions — 32 copies, 2 reviews
Beethoven : Symphony no.2 in D major, Op.36 + Symphony no.4 in B-flat major, Op.60 [sound recording] (1998) — Orchestra, some editions — 27 copies, 1 review
Symphonies No. 1–4 + Academic Festival Overture, Op. 80 + Tragic Overture + Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Op. 56a [sound recording] (1997) — Orchestra, some editions — 21 copies
Cun Příhody Lišky Bystroušky (The Cunning Little Vixen) [sound recording] (2002) — Orchestra, some editions — 21 copies
Prokofiev: Peter and the Wolf / Saint-Saëns: Carnival of the Animals [sound recording] (1990) — Artists, some editions — 20 copies, 1 review
Schubert : Symphony no.3 in D + Symphony no.8 in B minor, D.759 'Unfinished' [sound recording] (1997) — Orchestra — 19 copies
Mozart : Symphony no.39 in E flat major, K543 + Symphony no.40 in G minor, K550 {sound recordings} (1983) — Orchestra, some editions — 18 copies
Madama Butterfly {highlights} [sound recording] (1974) — Orchestra, some editions — 17 copies, 1 review
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' + Schubert : Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 [sound recording] {Böhm 1971/1979} (1971) — Orchestra, some editions — 13 copies
The song of the earth + Three songs after Rückert [sound recording] (2000) — Orchestra, some editions — 13 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.4 in B-flat major, op.60 + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' [sound recording] (1995) — Artist, some editions — 8 copies, 1 review
Tchaikovsky : Nutcracker Op.71a {suite} + Sleeping Beauty {suite} + Swan Lake {suite} [sound recording] (1986) — Orchestra, some editions — 7 copies
The bartered bride: Overture/Polka/Furiant/Skočná + Má Vlast (My Country) [sound recording] (2001) — Orchestra, some editions — 6 copies
Beethoven: Missa Solemnis / Mozart: Coronation Mass [sound recording] (1996) — orchestra, some editions — 6 copies
Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2 / Variations on a Theme by Haydn / Tragic Overture / Academic Festival Overture [sound recording] (2004) — Artists, some editions — 5 copies
Overtures — Artists, some editions — 5 copies
Kiri Te Kanawa: Classics [sound recording] — Orchestra — 4 copies
Symphony no. 40, in G minor, K. 550 / Symphony no. 104, in D (London). — Orchestra — 4 copies
Mussorgsky : Boris Godunov {highlights} + Khovanshchina {highlights} + Night on Bald Mountain + Pictures At An Exhibition + Songs and Dances Of Death + 6 Songs {sound recording} (2004) — Orchestra, some editions — 4 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 [sound recording] {Kleiber} (1975) — Orchestra, some editions — 4 copies
Dvořák : Symphony no.9 in E minor, Op.95, B.178 'From the New World' [video recording] (2004) — orchestra, some editions — 4 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.1 in C major, op.21 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.36 + Symphony no.3 in E-flat major, op.55, 'Eroica' + Symphony no.4 in B-flat major, op.60 + Symphony… (1952) — Orchestra, some editions — 4 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.1 in C major, Op.21 + Symphony no.7 in A major, Op.92 [sound recording] (1999) — Orchestre, some editions — 4 copies
Los Clásicos de la Ópera 400 años : Wagner : Die Walküre [sound recording + libretto] (1954) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Beethoven : Leonore, op.72b : Overture no.3 + Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 [sound recording] {Bernstein 1978/1980} (2000) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' [sound recording] {Monteux} — band, some editions; Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Giordano : Andrea Chénier [sound recording] {Corelli/Matacic 1960} (1960) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Grieg : Carnival Scene + I love you + Liszt : Soirées De Vienne: Valse Caprice Nr.6 + Schubert : The Erl-king {arr. Liszt} + The trout {arr. Liszt} + Schumann : Arabeske, Op.18 +… (1993) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Mozart : Symphony no.25 + 29 + 35 + 36 + 38 + Symphony no.39 in E flat major, K543 + 40 +41 [sound recording] (2013) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Essential Opera 2 [sound recording] — Performer — 3 copies
Beethoven : Coriolan overture + Leonore, op.72a : Overture no.2 + Brahms : Haydn variations, op.56a + Hungarian dances + Symphonies nos.1-3 [sound recording] {Furtwängler} (1995) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Beethoven : Coriolan overture + Egmont : Overture + Symphony no.1 in C major, op.21 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.36 + Symphony no.3 in E flat major, op. 55, 'Eroica' + Symphony… (1981) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
E. Chabrier: Suite Pastorale Habanera/ Espana / Larghetto / Ouverture De Gwendoline / Prelude Pastoral / Marche Francaise / Fete Polonaise (1996) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
The Wagner Collection — Orchestra — 3 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.1 in C major, op.21 + Symphony no.3 in E-flat major, op.55, 'Eroica' + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68 'Pastoral' + Symphony no.8 in F major, op.93 [sound… (1994) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Beethoven : Calm sea and prosperous voyage, op.112 + Choral fantasy, op.80 + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' [sound recording] {Abbado} (1809) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Strauss : Capriccio : Introduction / Moonlight + Intermezzo + Rosenkavalier {suite} + Salome's dance [sound recording] (1993) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Sibelius : Symphony no.1 in E minor, Op.39 [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Beethoven : Symphony no.2 in D major, op.36 + Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 [sound recording] {Rattle 2002} (2002) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Leonard Bernstein, an American life [music from the radio documentary] (2004) — Orchestra — 2 copies
Tannhäuser Overture / Prelude and Isolde's Liebestod / Siegfried Idyll (1988) — orchestra — 2 copies
Sinfonietta / Taras Bulba / The Cunning Little Vixen Suite [sound recording] (2013) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Beethoven : Leonore, op.72a : Overture no.2 + Leonore, op.72b : Overture no.3 + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' + Symphony no.7 in A major, op.92 + Symphony no.8 in F… (1995) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Wagner : The Valkyrie : highlights [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Beethoven : Consecration of the house, op.124 : Overture + Egmont : Overture + For the name day, op.115 + The ruins of Athens, op.113 + Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 + Symphony… — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Beethoven : Egmont : Overture + Fidelio : Overture, op.72c + King Stephen, op.117 + La Marseillaise + Symphony no.1 in C major, op.21 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.36 + Symphony… (2015) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Famous Overtures: Euryanthe / Preciosa / Oberon / Peter Schmoll und seine Nachbarn [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Beethoven : Coriolan overture + Creatures of Prometheus : Overture + Egmont : Overture + Leonore, op.72a : Overture no.2 + Leonore, op.72b : Overture no.3 + Symphony no.1 in C… (2013) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies
Boito : Mefistofele : Prologue + Strauss : Four songs op.27 : Cäcilie/Morgen + Six songs op.37 : I love you + Eight poems from "Last Leaves" : Zueignung + Five songs op.41 Cradle… (2006) — Orchestra, some editions — 2 copies, 1 review
Strauss : From Italy + Salome : Tanz fur mich, Salome / Salome's dance / Final scene [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Los Clásicos de la Ópera 400 años : Mozart : Don Giovanni [sound recording + libretto] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Dvorak : Scherzo Capriccioso + Slavonic Dances {5} + Symphony no.8 + Symphony no.9 + Smetana : The bartered bride : Dances {3} + My country : Vysehrad/Vltava [sound recording] (2003) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Strauss : Salome : Salome's dance + Final scene [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Tchaikovsky : Sleeping Beauty {suite} + Swan Lake {suite} [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' : III. Lustiges Zusammensein der Landleute [sound recording] {Bernstein 1981} (2004) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Twilight of the Gods : Disk 1 of 4 — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Smetana : The bartered bride : Overture/Polka/Furiant/Skočná + Hakon Jarl + My country + Prague carnival + Richard III + Wallenstein's camp [sound recording] (1998) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Ouvertüren — Artists, some editions — 1 copy
Vienna Philharmonic - Bruckner — some editions — 1 copy
Twilight of the Gods : Disk 2 of 4 — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Twilight of the Gods : Disk 3 of 4 — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Twilight of the Gods : Disk 4 of 4 — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Fair at Sorochyntsi : Hopak + Khovantchina : Prelude + Night on Bald Mountain + Pictures at an exhibition [sound recording] (2002) — Orchestre, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' + Symphony no.8 in F major, op.93 [sound recording] {Furtwängler} — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy, 1 review
Beethoven : Coriolan overture + Leonore, op.72b : Overture no.3 + Symphony no.1 in C major, op.21 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.36 + Symphony no.3 in E-flat major, op.55 'Eroica'… — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Wagner : The Valkyrie : Act 2 {annunciation of death} + Act 3 {complete} [sound recordiing] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Memories Of Vienna [Sound Recording] — Artist — 1 copy
Mozart : Clarinet Concerto + Marriage of Figaro : Overture + Serenade no.13 'Eine Kleine Nachtmusik' + Symphony no.39 in E flat major, K543 [sound recording] (1997) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
From Vienna with Love: Music of Josef and Johann Strauss [sound recording] (1971) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' + Symphony no.9 in D minor, op.125, 'Choral' [sound recording] {Böhm 1971/1981} — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' + Symphony no.8 in F major, op.93 [sound recording] {Abbado 1986/1987} (1986) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Coriolan : Overture + King Stephen, op.117 + Symphony no.6 in F major, op.68, 'Pastoral' [sound recording] {Bernstein 1980} (1980) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Nielsen: Concerto for Clarinet & Fantasy for Clarinet and Piano / Grieg: Lyric Pieces & Last Spring [sound recording] — Artists, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 + Schubert : Symphony no.8 in B minor, D.759, "unfinished" [sound recording] {Klemperer 1968} (1968) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Fidelio + Donizetti : L'Elisir D'Amore + Giordano : Andrea Chénier + Massenet : Manon + Puccini : La Boheme + Verdi : La Traviata [sound recording] (2007) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Vienna Spectacular [sound recording] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Waltzes [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Siegfried : Vol. 1 of 4 [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Madama Butterfly [sound recording : Freni/Karajan] [Disc 2] (1974) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Siegfried : Vol. 2 of 4 [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Siegfried : Vol. 3 of 4 [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Siegfried : Vol. 4 of 4 [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
La Gran Ópera Paso a Paso : Strauss : Salome [book + full score + sound recording] (1981) — Orchestra — 1 copy
Sibelius : Karelia Suite, op.11 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.43 [sound recording] (2012) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Sibelius : Symphony no.1 in E minor, op.39 + Symphony no.2 in D major, op.43 + 5 + 7 [sound recording] (2011) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Leonore, op.72b : Overture no.3 + Symphony no.5 in C minor, op.67 [sound recording] {Bernstein 1978/1980} — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Emperor Waltz - Waltzes and Polkas [Sound Recording] — Artist, some editions — 1 copy
Beethoven : Symphony no.5 in C minor, Op.67 + Shostakovich : Symphony no.9 in E flat major, Op.76 [sound recording] — Orchestra — 1 copy
Strauss : Death & transfiguration + Don Juan + Salome's dance + Till Eulenspiegel's merry pranks [sound recording] — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Strauss : Salome [sound recording] {1961 Solti/Vienna Philharmonic} (1961) — Orchestra, some editions — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Vienna Philharmonic
- Legal name
- Wiener Philharmoniker
- Birthdate
- 1842
- Gender
- n/a
- Nationality
- Austria
- Places of residence
- Vienna, Austria
- Associated Place (for map)
- Vienna, Austria
Members
Reviews
Jenůfa was the work that launched Janáček’s operatic career. Leos Janacek wrote his opera Jenufa between 1896 and 1903. It wasn't until the 1970s that it began to dawn on the British consciousness that the Czech composer - previously known for a handful of orchestral pieces like the Sinfonietta - was one of the 20th century's greatest operatic composers.
Jenufa can seem melodramatic. It's a classic love triangle, complicated by the interjection of a religious fanatic, the Kostelnicka. show more Jenufa marked the beginning of Janacek's quest for what he called "speech melody". Although he moved further way from the format of conventional opera, with arias and duets, he developed one of the most personal and subtle melodic signatures in all music. He studied the speech patterns of mental patients, the noises of animals and birds, and he listened as carefully to traditional folk music as he did to the emerging contemporary school from western Europe. He wrote: "The spirit that infuses all life can be found near at hand, in ourselves, among people perfectly familiar to us, enchanti ng and piquant, arresting melodies and amazing scenes." That's why his music speaks more directly to modern audiences than any composer of his time.
This is a story of wild passion and fatal pride, in which love and forgiveness triumph only after great suffering--Janácek deals with compassion and redemption, rather than directly with religion. However, in portraying the life of a small Moravian village in the second half of the 19th century, he does tell us something about the religion and the way in which it permeated everyday life.
Thus the Kostelnicka (or Sextoness) has earned her title on account of looking after the small local church. She is also a trusted adviser, and enjoys a high social status in the community. But her desperate wish to save her stepdaughter's honor and future prospects leads to terrible heresy: "I will deliver the boy to God," she tells herself at the end of Act II, before setting off to drown the illegitimate child. Her reasoning has been twisted by her fear of the inevitable humiliation of both Jenufa and herself, and her pride has proved stronger than her faith.
Yet the Kostelnicka's fear of disgrace was genuine: in the rural communities of 19th-century Moravia, "fallen" girls had to endure horrific public humiliation, and they frequently remained social and economic outcasts for the rest of their lives. The contemporary village mores are tellingly described by Janácek's onetime colleague and fellow folklorist Frantisek Bartos in the preface to their 1899 book, Moravian Folk-songs Newly Collected: "The sensual, sexual love, ennobled by Christianity, has acquired the character of a moral idea, and in this idealized form it is the origin of the most beautiful love songs." But, writes Bartos, the necessary condition of the longing for the beloved which inspired such folk songs was "morality, strict discipline, and chastity. And, among our people, one minded and observed these most strictly."
Thus all transgressors against the stern social order and local customs invited harsh judgment. In one region of Moravia, according to Bartos, a pregnant girl would have her long hair cut off in public by the married women of the village; around the capital of Brno, when a pregnant girl was getting married, the village youths would mockingly carry a cradle behind the wedding procession. Elsewhere in southern Moravia the local shepherd would run the "fallen" girl through the village and crack the whip above her as the local community was returning from Mass.
Life in rural Moravia was far from joyless at the time. Dances and festivals abounded and the young would make merry. Yet young men, too, would invite criticism if they played the field too often, and seducers would rarely escape punishment. In the finale of Jenufa it is the vox populi, in the person of the Shepherdess, which pronounces the judgment on the handsome, feckless Steva: "No girl would marry him now, not even an honest Gypsy."
Only Laca's love overcomes all obstacles. To him, Jenufa--her beauty spoiled and her reputation tarnished--is still the girl he has always loved, and he doesn't even care about her forthcoming trial and the inevitable public scorn. "What is the world to us," he tells her, "if we can comfort one another?" At long last he wins Jenufa's heart: "This is that greater love, the love that pleases God," she responds.
In Jenufa, Janácek draws our attention to some of humanity's highest moral ideals. Laca's love for Jenufa helps him overcome his destructive jealousy; Jenufa's compassion makes the Kostelnicka realise the extent of her pernicious pride, and her subsequent humility redeems her in Jenufa's eyes. At the time of writing his first operatic masterpiece, Janácek was no longer a believer. But compassion and redemption--essential parts of the Christian doctrine--are the cornerstones of Jenufa, and indeed of many of Janácek's subsequent stage works. It is also a story that emphasises the importance of the social background and group pressures and influences on family life and the development of intrapsychic and interpersonal conflict. show less
Jenufa can seem melodramatic. It's a classic love triangle, complicated by the interjection of a religious fanatic, the Kostelnicka. show more Jenufa marked the beginning of Janacek's quest for what he called "speech melody". Although he moved further way from the format of conventional opera, with arias and duets, he developed one of the most personal and subtle melodic signatures in all music. He studied the speech patterns of mental patients, the noises of animals and birds, and he listened as carefully to traditional folk music as he did to the emerging contemporary school from western Europe. He wrote: "The spirit that infuses all life can be found near at hand, in ourselves, among people perfectly familiar to us, enchanti ng and piquant, arresting melodies and amazing scenes." That's why his music speaks more directly to modern audiences than any composer of his time.
This is a story of wild passion and fatal pride, in which love and forgiveness triumph only after great suffering--Janácek deals with compassion and redemption, rather than directly with religion. However, in portraying the life of a small Moravian village in the second half of the 19th century, he does tell us something about the religion and the way in which it permeated everyday life.
Thus the Kostelnicka (or Sextoness) has earned her title on account of looking after the small local church. She is also a trusted adviser, and enjoys a high social status in the community. But her desperate wish to save her stepdaughter's honor and future prospects leads to terrible heresy: "I will deliver the boy to God," she tells herself at the end of Act II, before setting off to drown the illegitimate child. Her reasoning has been twisted by her fear of the inevitable humiliation of both Jenufa and herself, and her pride has proved stronger than her faith.
Yet the Kostelnicka's fear of disgrace was genuine: in the rural communities of 19th-century Moravia, "fallen" girls had to endure horrific public humiliation, and they frequently remained social and economic outcasts for the rest of their lives. The contemporary village mores are tellingly described by Janácek's onetime colleague and fellow folklorist Frantisek Bartos in the preface to their 1899 book, Moravian Folk-songs Newly Collected: "The sensual, sexual love, ennobled by Christianity, has acquired the character of a moral idea, and in this idealized form it is the origin of the most beautiful love songs." But, writes Bartos, the necessary condition of the longing for the beloved which inspired such folk songs was "morality, strict discipline, and chastity. And, among our people, one minded and observed these most strictly."
Thus all transgressors against the stern social order and local customs invited harsh judgment. In one region of Moravia, according to Bartos, a pregnant girl would have her long hair cut off in public by the married women of the village; around the capital of Brno, when a pregnant girl was getting married, the village youths would mockingly carry a cradle behind the wedding procession. Elsewhere in southern Moravia the local shepherd would run the "fallen" girl through the village and crack the whip above her as the local community was returning from Mass.
Life in rural Moravia was far from joyless at the time. Dances and festivals abounded and the young would make merry. Yet young men, too, would invite criticism if they played the field too often, and seducers would rarely escape punishment. In the finale of Jenufa it is the vox populi, in the person of the Shepherdess, which pronounces the judgment on the handsome, feckless Steva: "No girl would marry him now, not even an honest Gypsy."
Only Laca's love overcomes all obstacles. To him, Jenufa--her beauty spoiled and her reputation tarnished--is still the girl he has always loved, and he doesn't even care about her forthcoming trial and the inevitable public scorn. "What is the world to us," he tells her, "if we can comfort one another?" At long last he wins Jenufa's heart: "This is that greater love, the love that pleases God," she responds.
In Jenufa, Janácek draws our attention to some of humanity's highest moral ideals. Laca's love for Jenufa helps him overcome his destructive jealousy; Jenufa's compassion makes the Kostelnicka realise the extent of her pernicious pride, and her subsequent humility redeems her in Jenufa's eyes. At the time of writing his first operatic masterpiece, Janácek was no longer a believer. But compassion and redemption--essential parts of the Christian doctrine--are the cornerstones of Jenufa, and indeed of many of Janácek's subsequent stage works. It is also a story that emphasises the importance of the social background and group pressures and influences on family life and the development of intrapsychic and interpersonal conflict. show less
Horenstein - one of the great conductors of the twentieth century. He could raise the temperature to boiling point in concert and was amazing in Bruckner and Mahler.
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