Mendelssohn: Lieder ohne Worte, Books 5-8 / Brautigam
Felix Mendelssohn had no idea that when he presented his sister Fanny with a āsong without wordsā for her birthday, that he was inventing his own genre. He went on to compose a great number of these Lieder ohne Worte. These works became incredibly popular among pianists, and among audiences. In the words of Mendelssohn himself, āThe music I love expresses ideas that are not too vague to be captured in words, but on the contrary too precise.ā Pianist Ronald Brautigam performs these works on a piano copied by Paul McNulty after an Ignaz Pleyel 1830 model.
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Mendelssohn: Lieder ohne Worte, Books 5-8 / Brautigam
Mendelssohn: Lieder ohne Worte, Books 5-8 / Brautigam
Felix Mendelssohn had no idea that when he presented his sister Fanny with a āsong without wordsā for her birthday, that he was inventing his own genre. He went on to compose a great number of these Lieder ohne Worte. These works became incredibly popular among pianists, and among audiences. In the words of Mendelssohn himself, āThe music I love expresses ideas that are not too vague to be captured in words, but on the contrary too precise.ā Pianist Ronald Brautigam performs these works on a piano copied by Paul McNulty after an Ignaz Pleyel 1830 model.
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Felix Mendelssohn had no idea that when he presented his sister Fanny with a āsong without wordsā for her birthday, that he was inventing his own genre. He went on to compose a great number of these Lieder ohne Worte. These works became incredibly popular among pianists, and among audiences. In the words of Mendelssohn himself, āThe music I love expresses ideas that are not too vague to be captured in words, but on the contrary too precise.ā Pianist Ronald Brautigam performs these works on a piano copied by Paul McNulty after an Ignaz Pleyel 1830 model.