Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q7190090> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 37 of
37
with 100 triples per page.
- Q7190090 subject Q7214378.
- Q7190090 subject Q8137323.
- Q7190090 subject Q8407004.
- Q7190090 abstract "The Symphonic Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in B minor by Wilhelm Furtwängler was written between 1924 and 1937, and is among the longest of all piano concertos. It received its world premiere in Munich on October 1937, with Edwin Fischer as the piano soloist; Furtwängler conducted the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra. In January 1939 there was a radio broadcast which has survived as the only documentation of the unpublished version of the concerto.The piano concerto is cast in three movements: The first (Schwer, pesante in B minor) is an extensive sonata form movement of more than 30 minutes duration. As a second movement there follows an Adagio solenne in D major. It is influenced by Bruckner's and Brahms' adagio style and lasts about 11 minutes. The third movement (Allegro moderato in B minor) is composed in free form and has some hints of a rondo. Its duration is about 20 minutes and the work concludes in dark and gloomy mood with pianissimo dynamics.Furtwängler's Symphonic Concerto received mixed reviews, and has, as a very difficult piece for both pianists and orchestras, rarely been performed in public. There were extensive revisions made to the concerto prior to its publication by Brucknerverlag of Wiesbaden in 1954, and this is the version that has been heard in public since then. The concerto has been published once since, in a critical edition edited by George Alexander Albrecht (see below). There is also a two-piano reduction score and one of the libraries in Britain currently house it, according to WorldCat.Other notable champions of the work have included Paul Badura-Skoda, Daniel Barenboim, Konstantin Scherbakov, Gerhard Oppitz, Erik Then-Bergh, Gergely Boganyi, Bella Dagmar, Walter Prossnitz, Johannes Bork (June 14, 1950, with W.Furtwangler as conductor), Homero Francesch, Hirokuni Ishikawa, Takahiro Sonoda, András Schiff and David Lively (a pupil of Claudio Arrau) and most recently, Stephan Möller.".
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q108151.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q1124006.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q113558.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q120568.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q123249.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q13323.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q152222.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q152768.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q157635.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q158017.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q160223.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q1721.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q1726.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q1746028.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q189214.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q212044.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q284039.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q284581.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q315715.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q427319.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q5442159.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q57285.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q636159.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q671446.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214378.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q7294.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q8137323.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q81752.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q8407004.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q84919.
- Q7190090 wikiPageWikiLink Q93672.
- Q7190090 comment "The Symphonic Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in B minor by Wilhelm Furtwängler was written between 1924 and 1937, and is among the longest of all piano concertos. It received its world premiere in Munich on October 1937, with Edwin Fischer as the piano soloist; Furtwängler conducted the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra.".
- Q7190090 label "Piano Concerto (Furtwängler)".