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In Reply to: RE: Wow - I don't think I've ever heard anyone else describe. . . posted by Chris from Lafayette on October 07, 2020 at 16:56:47
moments, pieces, mov'ts, comparative performances, etc. : )
Follow Ups:
I like his lieder/songs from the early part of his career.
I am particularly fond of the piano pieces Three Piano Pieces Op. 11/Drei Klavierstücke Op. 11; Six Little Piano Pieces Op. 19/Sechs Kleine Klavierstücke Op. 19; Five Piano Pieces Op. 23/Fünf Klavierstücke Op. 23; Suite For Piano Op. 25/Suite Für Klavier Op. 25; Piano Piece Op. 33a/Klavierstück Op. 33a; Piano Piece Op. 33b · Klavierstück Op. 33b. Maurizio Pollini did a wonderful recording of these pieces.
Other great pieces are his Violin Concerto and Piano Concerto. And of course the Pierrot Lunaire (which is a real treat in a live performance). The Jan DeGaetani recording is really good.
The string quartets are quite good, although I need to be in the right mood to really listen to them. The second quartet based on the text of a poem is pretty trippy:
I feel air from another planet.
I faintly through the darkness see faces ...
Enjoy the music.
/
it includes the Berg and Webern quartets.
Robert Craft also conducted a lot of the Schoenberg orchestral works for the Columbia label.
Nonesuch records has some great recordings of modern music. Paul Jacobs recorded the piano solo pieces, another great recording and performance.
Enjoy the music.
(Prazak Quartet on the Praga label)
.
. . . you'll even acquire the inner perceptiveness it takes to become a Totentanz devotee! ;-)
I find that I get tend to get triggered easily by certain music.
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