Brahms, Symphony No.4 in E minor, op.98

Composed during the summer months of 1884 and 1885 in Mürzzuschlag, southwest of Vienna, the Fourth Symphony tended to disconcert the public at first and had to prove itself in the concert circuit before gaining recognition as a masterwork of epoch-making stature. What Brahms's contemporaries regarded as difficult and bewildering were above all the extreme constructive density of the score, the unusual layout, especially of the third and fourth movements, a number of archaic elements pointing back to the formulae and techniques of "early music" (the passacaglia in the fourth movement) and the austere, elegiac mood that permeates the entire work. The premiere of the Fourth Symphony was given by the Meiningen Court Orchestra in Meiningen under Brahms's direction on 25 October 1885. Leonard Bernstein's interpretation with the Boston Symphony Orchestra was recorded at Tanglewood. For Bernstein, Brahms was "a true Romantic, containing his passions in classical garb", but also a "North-German classicist swept away to Vienna, and fired by Danubian, Carpathian and gypsy passions". Bearing this dualism in mind, Bernstein underscored both the classicism and romanticism, the dramatic intensity and the sober restraint of Brahms's music.

  • No: A05500548
  • Genre: Concert
  • Composer: Johannes Brahms
  • Conductor: Leonard Bernstein
  • Orchestra: Boston Symphony Orchestra
  • Director: Humphrey Burton
  • Music Genre: Orchestral Music
  • Production year: 1972
  • Run time: 00:46:00