Piano Quartet (Strauss)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Piano_Quartet_(Strauss) an entity of type: Thing

Le Quatuor pour piano et cordes en ut mineur opus 13 est un quatuor pour piano, violon, alto et violoncelle de Richard Strauss. Composé en 1884, il est créé le 6 décembre 1885 à Meiningen. Il est dédié au Duc George II de Saxe-Meiningen. rdf:langString
The Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 13, TrV 137, was written by Richard Strauss from 1884 to 1885. An early chamber music work of the then 20-year-old composer, it shows considerable influence from Johannes Brahms. It is scored for a standard piano quartet consisting of a piano, violin, viola, and cello. At the premiere on 8 December 1885 in Weimar, Strauss himself performed the piano part. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Quatuor pour piano et cordes de Strauss
rdf:langString Piano Quartet (Strauss)
rdf:langString Piano Quartet in C minor
xsd:integer 69593056
xsd:integer 1102665103
xsd:integer 13
rdf:langString Cover page of first edition
rdf:langString TrV 137
xsd:integer 1884
<second> -2400.0
rdf:langString four
xsd:date 1885-12-08
rdf:langString Richard Strauss
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hagel
rdf:langString
rdf:langString piano
rdf:langString viola
rdf:langString violin
rdf:langString cello
rdf:langString Performed by the Ames Piano Quartet
rdf:langString Le Quatuor pour piano et cordes en ut mineur opus 13 est un quatuor pour piano, violon, alto et violoncelle de Richard Strauss. Composé en 1884, il est créé le 6 décembre 1885 à Meiningen. Il est dédié au Duc George II de Saxe-Meiningen.
rdf:langString The Piano Quartet in C minor, Op. 13, TrV 137, was written by Richard Strauss from 1884 to 1885. An early chamber music work of the then 20-year-old composer, it shows considerable influence from Johannes Brahms. It is scored for a standard piano quartet consisting of a piano, violin, viola, and cello. At the premiere on 8 December 1885 in Weimar, Strauss himself performed the piano part. The work consists of four movements, with a total playing time of 37 to 40 minutes. The first movement is in sonata form with many sharp contrasts and a constantly switching mood. The second movement is a light and playful scherzo dominated by a leaping motif. The third movement is lyrical and reflective, while the finale revisits the turbulent mood of the opening movement. The work was favorably received by the press and public. Strauss submitted it to a competition of the Berliner Tonkünstlerverein and was awarded the first prize out of 24 entries. Though the Piano Quartet ultimately never rivalled the success of his other early chamber pieces, Strauss cherished the piece and programmed it regularly until the 1920s.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 18114

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