Beethoven, Coriolan Overture, op.62

At the request of the writer Heinrich Joseph von Collin, Beethoven composed an overture to Collin's tragedy in five acts Coriolanus (1802) in the spring of 1807. It was given its first performance in March 1807 in Prince Lobkowitz's palace in Vienna. Although Beethoven's music did not bring about the hoped-for stage revival of Collin's tragedy, the Overture made its breakthrough as an independent concert piece. A dramatic work that owes its somber quality to Collin's tragedy, it came to be favored for solemn occasions. Bernstein's impassioned renderings of Beethoven move audiences in a unique way. "Beethoven has always meant universality to me, ever since my early adolescence, when I first heard that unforgettable cry of 'Brüder!'. From that moment on, every... symphony came to mean heart-to-heart communication, traveling satellite-fashion via the cosmos itself. I offer [this cycle] to all music-loving ears as a testament of faith and of my most profound reactions to this greatest of all composers." (Leonard Bernstein, 1980)

  • No: A05500666
  • Genre: Concert
  • Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Conductor: Leonard Bernstein
  • Orchestra: Wiener Philharmoniker
  • Director: Humphrey Burton
  • Music Genre: Orchestral Music
  • Production year: 1981
  • Run time: 00:11:00
  • Format: 4:3