Sunday, April 28, 2013

We're Back!


The Classical Period, 1750-1825
April 27- May 9: Haydn
            VGCM p110-141
JOHANN CHRISTIAN BACH
Concerto for Harpsichord (or piano) and Strings in E-flat major op. 7 no. 5
CARL PHILIPP EMANUEL BACH
Keyboard sonatas
CHRISTOPH WILLIBALD GLUCK
            Operas: Orfeo ed EuridiceIphigenie en Tauride
FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDN
String quartets
Sun Quartets, especially op. 20 no. 4.
Russian (or Gli scherzi) Quartets op. 33, especially no. 2, "The Joke"
ErdOdy Quartets op. 76, especially no. 2 in D minor, "Quinten," and no. 5 in D major, "Largo"
Concertos
Trumpet Concerto in E-flat major
Cello Concerto in D major op. 101
Symphonies
Early Symphonies: nos. 6, 7, 8 (Morning, Noon, Evening). 
Middle Symphonies: no. 45 (Farewell), no. 48 (Maria Theresa), no. 49 (La Passion)
Late: Symphonies: no. 94 (Surprise), no. 100 (Military), no. 101 (Clock), no. 104 (London)
Choral works
Mass in Time of War (Paukenmess)
The Creation

5 comments:

  1. i was just wondering about this very thing...

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  2. Really pleased with the JC Bach. So far my favorite - sounds oddly 20th century vs the lot.

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  3. listening to it now. carra is please with the whole lot, as the organizational skills of hayden are pretty fantastic. she also digs the JC Bach, but that has a lot to do with her love of piano. which leads me to request you upload the shostakovich we enjoyed at your place. i know it's jumping the fence, but i would like to sit with the whole album now that my appetite has been whetted.

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  4. actually, we didn't get the JC Bach. We are listening to the CPE Bach. the JC Bach is apparently harpsichord?

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