Friday, 29 May 2026

Beethoven & Witt - Chen Reiss & Christoph Altstaedt

 


Ludwig VAN BEETHOVEN 

& Friedrich WITT


Arias & orchestral works


Academy of Ancient Music


Chen Reiss, soprano


DIR.: CHRISTOPH ALTSTAEDT


recorded: March 4, 2020, Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg


period instruments

flac (original bitrate: 320 kbps mp2)


Thanks to the first uploader



Ludwig VAN BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)

(01) Overture Die Geschöpfe des Prometheus, op. 43 [05'32"]


Cantata on the Accession of Emperor Leopold II, WoO 88: 

[Kantate auf die Erhebung Leopolds II. zur Kaiserwürde] 

(02) Fließe Wonnezahren, fließe [11'11"]


Friedrich WITT (1770-1836)

Symphony No. 4 in E flat [28'50"]

(03) adagio sostenuto - allegro vivace [09'01"]

(04) adagio ma un poco andante [06'18"]

(05) menuetto. allegro - trio [05'24"]

(06) finale. allegro molto [08'07"]


Ludwig VAN BEETHOVEN

(07) Ah! Perfido, op. 65 [13'33"]


Symphony No. 4 in B flat, op. 60 [33'42"]

(08) adagio - allegro vivace [11'29"]

(09) adagio [09'28"]

(10) scherzo - trio. allegro vivace [05'27"]

(11) allegro ma non troppo [07'18"]


[encore]

(12) Soll ein Schuh nicht drücken (WoO 91,2) [05'03"]


links: 

Beethoven, Overture op. 43

Beethoven, Cantata WoO 88

Beethoven, Ah! Perfido

Beethoven, Symphony No. 4

Beethoven, scores

Friedrich Wittparts

Chen Reiss

Academy of Ancient Music


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1 comment:

  1. I keep thinking about how rarely we discuss classical music as narrative architecture rather than just emotional expression.

    Dante’s Inferno is a fascinating example, it almost functions like a pre-composed symphonic structure: clear progression, escalating intensity, symbolic “characters” defined through environment rather than dialogue.

    It makes me wonder how many modern orchestral or film composers are intentionally thinking in terms of literary structure rather than purely musical form.

    Do you think narrative frameworks still meaningfully shape how we listen to large-scale orchestral works today?

    https://youtu.be/14fziK0497I

    ReplyDelete