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🔥🎧 Full Album available // Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 9,7,5,3 by Ferenc Fricsay 🔥🎧 Choose my streaming platform: https://lnk.to/beethoven3579fricsay 🎧 Qobuz (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/WrCkzuZi Tidal (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/vrCkzkCU 🎧 Amazon Music (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/2rCkzNeO Deezer (Hi-fi) https://cutt.ly/5rCkxu0p 🎧 Spotify (mp3) https://cutt.ly/jrCkxQf7 Youtube Music (mp3) https://cutt.ly/8rCkxJUO 🎧 Apple Music — Soundcloud (mp3) https://cutt.ly/krCkx8Nm 🔊 Download the album (Hi-Res MASTER - WAV uncompressed) https://cutt.ly/classicalmusicreferen... Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92 00:00 I. Poco sostenuto, vivace (2022 Remastered, Berlin 1960) 13:10 II. Allegretto (2022 Remastered, Berlin 1960) 23:08 III. Presto (2022 Remastered, Berlin 1960) 31:45 IV. Allegro con brio (2022 Remastered, Berlin 1960) Berliner Philharmoniker Conductor: Ferenc Fricsay Recorded in 1960 New mastering in 2022/2025 by AB for https://classicalmusicreference.com/ 🔊 Join us with your phone on our WhatsApp fanpage (our latest album preview): https://cutt.ly/5eathESK 🔊 Find our entire catalog on Qobuz: https://cutt.ly/geathMhL 🔊 Discover our playlists on Spotify: https://cutt.ly/ceatjtlB ❤ Support us on Patreon / about After the happy period from 1805 to 1809, during which Beethoven’s catalogue of compositions was enriched with a considerable number of masterpieces (including the wonderful Piano Sonata No. 26 in E-flat major, known as Les Adieux, dedicated to Archduke Rudolph to celebrate his return to Vienna), the year 1810 was less fruitful, though it did yield the String Quartet in F minor, Op. 95, dedicated to Zmeskall, and the Piano Trio in B-flat major, Op. 97, dedicated to Archduke Rudolph. It is interesting to note, alongside the grandiose and monumental character of the great symphonies and the improvisatory quality retained by the piano sonatas, the rich and varied density, the fullness of content, and the formal perfection of the compositions for trios and string quartets — new milestones along the path that would lead Beethoven toward an ever higher spirituality. Then came the magnificent explosion of creative genius with the Seventh Symphony (in A major, Op. 92), the fruit of three years of reflection and labor. Beethoven completed both the Seventh and Eighth Symphonies in 1812, though their plans and sketches dated back to 1809. The Seventh was first performed at a great charity concert on December 8, 1813, in Vienna, for the benefit of soldiers wounded in the Battle of Hanau during the campaign against Napoleon. The concert was organized by Johann Nepomuk Maelzel, the inventor of the metronome, various other mechanical musical instruments, and also of acoustic horns — still far too rudimentary to compensate for Beethoven’s deafness. At this charity concert, the finest musicians, composers, and soloists formed the orchestra. Meyerbeer and Hummel played the timpani, but Beethoven was hardly satisfied with them, and it is said that he complained that Meyerbeer invariably began late. The symphony aroused great enthusiasm, and the Allegro was encored — a fact that would be repeated at nearly every performance during Beethoven’s lifetime. However, in Leipzig the symphony was received coldly; critics declared that “Beethoven must have written the first and third movements under the influence of drink.” Beethoven, perhaps a touch ironic, wrote in response: “I am a Bacchus who bestows upon men the divine frenzy of the spirit…” According to Schindler, however, the Seventh “marked one of the most important moments in the master’s life, for all those who had previously refused to admit Beethoven’s music, except for a few professional musicians, now recognized that he had won his laurels.” (...) Richard Wagner, on the other hand, called the Seventh Symphony “The Apotheosis of the Dance.” COMPLETE PRESENTATION: LOOK THE FIRST PINNED COMMENT. 🔥🎧 Full Album available // Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 9,7,5,3 by Ferenc Fricsay 🔥🎧 Choose my streaming platform: https://lnk.to/beethoven3579fricsay Other Album available // Beethoven: Missa Solemnis, Op. 123 by Otto Klemperer 🎧 Qobuz (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/GrWnLDBJ Tidal (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/ErWnXvYt 🎧 Apple Music (Lossless) https://cutt.ly/7rWnX2Ih Amazon Music (Hi-Res) https://cutt.ly/9rT7uJde 🎧 Deezer (Hi-Fi) https://cutt.ly/SrWnCjAd Spotify (mp3) https://cutt.ly/vrWnCPaY 🎧 Youtube Music (mp4) https://cutt.ly/srIeKk4I Ludwig Van Beethoven PLAYLIST (reference recordings): • Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827)