Symphony In D Minor - III. Allegro Non Troppo
By Composer César Franck
Performed By Conductor Michel Plasson And The Orchestre Du Capitole De Toulouse
Orkestleider. Le chef d'orchestre. By Artist Xavier Swolfs

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Symphony In D Minor - III. Allegro Non Troppo
By Composer César Franck
Performed By Conductor Michel Plasson And The Orchestre Du Capitole De Toulouse
Orkestleider. Le chef d'orchestre. By Artist Xavier Swolfs
Symphony In D Minor - II. Allegretto - Poco Più Lento - Tempo I
By Composer César Franck
Performed By Conductor Michel Plasson And The Orchestre Du Capitole De Toulouse
Top 25 Favorite Composers
No.14: César Franck (10 December 1822 - 8 November 1890)
Franck was a Belgium born French composer who went a bit astray from nationalism and “French aesthetics” which were highly valued in the 19th century. Instead he had turned toward German emphasis on structure, on thematic transformation, and on the relationship between keys. He was a late bloomer as a composer. His father had pressured him into following the “child prodigy” expectation, and while he was a brilliant pianist, his compositions were more fun salon type works, playing around with popular opera melodies, but nothing super substantial. He turned toward music teaching in Paris, as well as being an organist. Later in his life, he became a teacher at the Conservatoire, and there he started writing the mature works that show his style. His music is an odd paradox. On the one hand, it is heavily structured, and a musicophiles can appreciate his use of cyclical form, of thematic transformation, of modulations, fugues...but on the other hand, it sounds so free, effortlessly flowing forward, and it carries such heavy emotional depth with it. His music is very introspective, as in, it makes me look inward, it touches a personal emotional side. My favorite works by him are the violin sonata, his first trio concertante, the prelude choral and fugue for piano, and the incredible Six Pieces for Grand Organ, and his piano quintet.
Grand Duo, Op. 82: III. Finale. Allegretto
By Composers François-Joseph Dizi & Frederic Kalkbrenner
Performed By Praxedis Hug-Rütti (Harp) And Praxedis Geneviève Hug (Piano)
“Piano and Harp” By Ellador
Prélude et Fugue et Variation, Op.18
By Composer César Franck
Célimène Daudet, Pianist
"A beautiful Melody" By Artist Hans Volkmer
Psyché : Poème Symphonique Pour Orchestre Et Choeurs, Part 1 - I. Le Sommeil De Psyché
Composition Year : 1886–87
By Composer César Franck
Performed By Conductor Jan Latham-Koenig And The Orchestre Philharmonique De Strasbourg
Eugène Ysaÿe: Malinconia
“Don’t always vibrate, but always be vibrating” (Eugène Ysaÿe)
This is day 25 of the A-toZ Challenge in which I attempt to blog every day (excepting Sundays) during the month of April. During this month, I am curating a collection of “classical” music pieces, which are lesser known or by lesser known composers (to me at least). Today’s composer is Eugène Ysaÿe (1858 – 1931).
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