Friday, November 08, 2019

#ClassicsaDay #ClassicalEleven Week 1

Numbers have meaning. But meaning can depend on context. The Classics a Day team made "eleven" the theme for November, the eleventh month. The challenge is to post performances of classical music that involve the number.


I chose a mix. Some pieces involve eleven players. Some are the eleventh type of piece by a composer. Some are the eleventh published work. Some had the number eleven assigned to them in some way by a cataloger.

There are many ways to arrive at #ClassicalEleven - here are my choices for the first full week.


11/01/19 Alan Hovhaness: Symphony No. 11 "All Men are Brothers" Op. 186

Hovhaness' eleventh symphony (out of 67) was finished in 1960. It incorporates some of his early music from the 1920s-30s, most of which he destroyed.



11/04/19 Ludwig van Beethoven: Piano Sonata No. 11 in B-flat major, Op. 22

This sonata was completed in 1800. Beethoven labeled it a "grand" sonata, indicating it had four movements instead of three.



11/05/19 Johann Sebastian Bach: Himmelfahrts-Oratorium, BWV 11

Bach wrote the "Ascension Oratorio" for the feast day service May 19, 1735. The large-scale work is a blend of new music and recycled material from earlier cantatas.



11/06/19 Fanny Mendelssohn-Hensel - Piano Trio, Op. 11

Fanny wrote the trio as a birthday present for her sister in 1847. It was completed just before her death, and published posthumously.



11/07/19 Felix Mendelssohn - Symphony No. 1, Op. 11

Mendelssohn completed the symphony at age 15. It was privately premiered in 1827 to honor his sister Fanny.



11/08/19 Giovanni Punto - Horn Concerto No. 11 in E-major

Punto (1746-1803) was a Czech horn player. He developed the hand-stopping technique that allowed natural horns to play more pitches.

No comments:

Post a Comment