Johannes Brahms wasn't exactly known for writing great xylophone parts. Or any xylophone parts, for that matter. But Arnold Schoenberg apparently thought that was just what Brahms needed. He orchestrated a Brahms piano quartet, and included a juicy part for the xylophone in the last movement. And he threw out the piano part entirely. Just a couple of the "improvements" in a wild, sometimes wacky, and ultimately very satisfying makeover by Arnold Schoenberg. We'll hear it, from a concert in New York.
Episode Playlist
Hour 1
Michael Torke: Opening, from Book Of Proverbs
The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Edo de Waart, conductor
Hildegard von Bingen: Antiphon: O Rubor Sanguinis  (O Redness of the Blood)
Anonymous 4
Spivey Hall, Morrow, Georgia
Joan Ambrosio Dalza: Piva alla Venetiana
The Toronto Consort
Seattle Early Music Guild, Seattle
Pablo Casals: Catalan Melody: Song of the Birds
Truls Mork, cello
Philharmonie, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
Sergei Rachmaninoff: Symphonic Dances, Op. 45
The Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, Edward Gardner, conductor
The Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Hour 2
Johannes Brahms: Third movement from Piano Trio in C Minor, Op. 101
The Beaux Arts Trio
Johann Sebastian Bach: Fourth movement from Solo Violin Sonata No. 1, BWV 1001
Chad Hoopes, violin
Bruce Adolphe: Younger Than Springtime in the Style of Johann Sebastian Bach
Bruce Adolphe, piano
Maud Moon Weyerhaeuser Studio, St. Paul
Johannes Brahms (Orchestrated by Arnold Schoenberg): Piano Quartet No. 1 in G Minor, Op. 25
The New York Philharmonic, Christoph Eschenbach, conductor
Avery Fisher Hall, New York City
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