The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

188


HE ... COMES AS


IF SENT STRAIGHT


FROM GOD


SYMPHONY NO. 1 ( 1876 ),
JOHANNES BRAHMS

I


n the first decades of the
19th century, Beethoven took
the symphony to new heights,
making it the most important
genre in the Austro-German
tradition. In the wake of his death,
a handful of composers stepped
in to assume Beethoven’s mantle.
Among them was German
composer Johannes Brahms, who
deplored program music—music
that sought to follow or describe
a narrative line—and openly
criticized the New German School
represented by Richard Wagner and

Franz Liszt. Brahms believed in
producing “pure” music, which was
abstract, rather than associated
with a plot line.
In 1853, Brahms met Robert
Schumann and his pianist wife,
Clara. Schumann, who was the
composer of four symphonies,
hailed Brahms as the great hope

Brahms and Adele Strauss, wife
of Johann Strauss II, sit down to
breakfast in his villa in the summer
of 1894. Brahms often visited their
villa in Bad Ischl, Austria.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Fall and rise of
the symphony

BEFORE
1824 Beethoven completes
his Symphony No. 9.

1853 Robert Schumann hails
Brahms as the hope of German
music in an influential essay,
Neue Bahnen (“New Paths”).

1858 Brahms completes his
First Piano Concerto, which
at one point was conceived
as a symphony, and his
First Serenade.

AFTER
1877 In a review, the
conductor Hans von Bülow
hails Brahms’s First Symphony
as “Beethoven’s 10th.”

1889 Mahler conducts the
premiere of his Symphony
No. 1 in Budapest, the first of
his nine completed symphonies.

US_188-189_Brahms.indd 188 26/03/18 1:01 PM

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