Ballade for piano in D minor ("Edward"), Op. 10/1

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AMG AllMusic Guide to Classical Music :

Ballade for piano in D minor ("Edward"), Op. 10/1

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Although opus numbers can be misleading (in that they don't always indicate order of composition), it is worth noting that Johannes Brahms used the pianoforte as the backbone of each of his first ten compositions -- there are works for piano solo, song-sets for voice and piano, and one piano trio (Op. 8). It was only after composing the four ballades for solo piano, Op. 10, that Brahms felt sufficiently comfortable with his powers to move away from the piano; perhaps this was because the four works of Op. 10 in some ways represent a peroration of his musical processes up to that point (1854) -- four corners that describe a square: something closed, after which the best and most fruitful course was a new one. The first of those four corners, the Ballade for piano in D minor, Op. 10, No. 1, is based on the ballad-poem "Edward" by Johann Gottfried Herder (adapted from a Scottish folk-ballad).

The Ballade in D minor, Op. 10, No. 1, is by no means, however, a tone poem in any real sense of the word: Brahms took only general elements of ambiance and, to a certain degree, shape from the 14-stanza poem, allowing them to inform but not define the simple, compact ternary form of the musical work. The music opens almost as would a song to Herder's text -- the words of the first couplet fit Brahms' melody syllable-to-note (the cry "Edward! Edward!" in plaintive descending octaves), and one can make a case for the second couplet as well. After this, however, the treatment is freer and follows no such text-setting plan. The music of the opening section is purely homophonic, almost chorale-like, and appropriately archaic sounding, quiet, and tense. The central D major portion is by contrast rich and warm, with pulsating triplets and a noble rising melody in the low register. One might argue that such a dramatic change of mood is utterly unjustified by the poem (as is the ternary structure), but perhaps Brahms was imaginatively delving underneath the poetic surface to create his own vision of the characters' (Edward and his mother) complex nature and history. This robust central section makes its way seamlessly back into the opening music, which gradually simmers down into a mire of tragedy, dismay, and drudgery -- the curse Edward places on his mother finds frighteningly apt expression in Brahms' music. ~ Blair Johnston, Rovi

Albums with Complete Performances of the Work

Title Date
...And Serenity 2003
Artist Portrait: Daniel Barenboim 2003
Backhaus plays Brahms 1994
Beethoven: Symphonies 3 & 5; Leonore and Coriolan Overtures [Exclusive Free Sampler Included] 2003
Brahms on Brass 2011
Brahms: Hungarian Dances WoO1; Pieces Op118
Brahms: Hungarian Dances; Ballades; Intermezzi; Waltzes; Rhapsodies; and other pieces
Brahms: Masterpieces for Solo Piano 2004
Brahms: Piano Concerto No. 2; Piano Works 2002
Brahms: Piano Concerto in Bf No2, Op83; Ballade in Dm Op10/1 2000
Brahms: Selected Piano Works 1998
Great Pianists of the Century 1996
Jeff Vidov: Arise, for There Are Four Paths to Truth 2006
Les Grands Pianistes du XXème siècle, Vol. 1 2003
Liszt: Masterpieces for Solo Piano [Exclusive Free Sampler Included] 2003
Night Break 2011
Piano Classics 2000
Russians in Recital 1997
Schubert: Sonata; Schumann: Waldscenen; Brahms: Ballade "Edward" 2004
Steinway Legends [Piano Box Edition]
Steinway Legends [Piano Box Edition]
Steinway Legends: Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli [Digipak] 2006
Steinway Legends: Arturo benedetti Michelangeli [Digipak] 2006
Steinway Legends: Emil Gilels 2006
Steinway Legends: Grand Edition 2006
Steinway Legends: Grand Edition 2006
Sviatoslav Richter: Out of Later Years 1997
The Complete Columbia Recordings, 1936-1939
The Intimate Brahms
The Very Best of Brahms 2008
Wilhelm Backhaus Plays Brahms

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