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  2. A German Requiem (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_German_Requiem_(Brahms)

    The second movement used some previously abandoned musical material written in 1854, the year of Schumann's mental collapse and attempted suicide, and of Brahms's move to Düsseldorf to assist Clara Schumann and her young children. [1] Brahms completed all but what is now the fifth movement by August 1866. [3]

  3. Piano Sonata No. 3 (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Sonata_No._3_(Brahms)

    The first movement begins with fortissimo chords that span almost the entire range of the piano register. A movement in sonata form , it is essentially composed of two musical subjects. The first of these is in F minor , which is followed by a brief episode that features the "fate motif" from Ludwig van Beethoven 's Symphony No. 5 in the same ...

  4. List of compositions by Johannes Brahms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_by...

    Op. 15 Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor : piano, orchestra 1854–58 original version as Sonata for Two Pianos 1854 (Mvts 2 & 3 are Anh. 2a/2) (discarded), 2nd version as Symphony in D minor in 4 mvts (4th mvt never written) 1854–55 (Mvts 2 & 3 are Anh. 2a/2) (discarded), final version (Piano Concerto) in 3 mvts (only 1st mvt from previous versions, 2nd & 3rd mvts new) 1855–58;

  5. Johannes Brahms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_Brahms

    Brahms stayed with Clara in Düsseldorf, becoming devoted to her amid Robert's insanity and institutionalization. The two remained close, lifelong friends after Robert's death. Brahms never married, perhaps in an effort to focus on his work as a musician and scholar. He was a self-conscious, sometimes severely self-critical composer.

  6. Clarinet Quintet (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarinet_Quintet_(Brahms)

    The fifth (final) variation, beginning with the viola playing the melody over the pizzicato cello, is back in B minor but bears a different metrical sign (6/8) till the end of the movement. The coda brings multiple themes from the first movement, and finally ends with a sudden loud B minor chord which eventually fades away (as opposed to the ...

  7. Symphony No. 4 (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphony_No._4_(Brahms)

    The main theme is 8 bars long and is heard at the very start of the movement. Brahms then repeats the theme in different variations precisely 30 times always 8 bars long, until he deviates from this pattern just before the coda which begins in bar 253 at "Piu Allegro". 4 bars before the coda Brahms changes for the first time during the whole ...

  8. Piano Quartet No. 3 (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Quartet_No._3_(Brahms)

    The second movement is a tempestuous scherzo (ternary form) in compound duple meter in C minor, the same key as the first movement. Donald Francis Tovey argues that Brahms puts the scherzo in the same key as the first movement because the first movement does not sufficiently stabilize its own tonic and requires the second movement to "[furnish] the tonal balance unprovided for by the end of ...

  9. Fünf Gesänge, Op. 104 (Brahms) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fünf_Gesänge,_Op._104...

    Fünf Gesänge (Five songs), Op. 104, is a song cycle of five part songs for mixed choir a cappella by Johannes Brahms. Composed in 1888 when Brahms was a 55-year-old bachelor, the five songs reflect an intensely nostalgic and even tragic mood. Brahms has chosen texts which centre on lost youth, summer turning into fall and, ultimately, man's ...