Dennis Brain: Verskil tussen weergawes

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Lyn 37:
Een van sy gunsteling horinginstrumente (deur Alexander van Mainz: 'n enkel B-moll horing met 'n F uitbreiding as 'n verstelskyfie) was erg beskadig tydens die noodlottige ongeluk. Dit is sedertdien gerestoureer deur ''Paxman Brothers of London'' en is op openbare uitstalling in die ''York Gate Collections'' by die Koninklike Akademie van Musiek, Londen.<ref>[https://www.ram.ac.uk/museum/item/16915|the Royal Academy of Music's description]</ref>
 
==Werke wat deels danksy Brain 'n herlewing ondervind het==
==Influence on the horn repertoire==
Brain het saam met Karajan gewerk om opnames van die vier Mozart horing concertos te maak. Die werke word nou as die basis van die solo horing repertorium beskou. Die concertos was oorspronklik geskryf vir [[Joseph Leutgeb]], 'n [[Wene|Weense]] speler van die [[natuurlike horing]]. Brain het sy vaardighede m.b.t. komposisie getoon toe hy die cadenzas vir die eerste en derde concertos vir sy opnames gekomponeer het. Brain het ook die twee [[Richard Strauss]] horing concertos gewild gemaak. Hy was die derde persoon om in 1948 in die openbaar die Horingconcerto No. 2 van Strauss saam met die Weense Filharmoniese Orkes uit te voer. In 1951 het Brain die eerste persoon in die moderne tyd geword om [[Joseph Haydn]] se Horingconcerto No. 1 te speel.
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===New works and commemorations===
Brain often asked composers to write new works for him to perform. Many composers offered their services to Brain without even being asked. Among them were [[Benjamin Britten]] (Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings, ''Canticle III''), [[Malcolm Arnold]] (Horn Concerto No. 2), [[Paul Hindemith]] (Concerto for Horn and Orchestra), [[York Bowen]] (Concerto for Horn, Strings and Timpani), [[Peter Racine Fricker]] (Horn Sonata), [[Gordon Jacob]] ([[Horn Concerto (Jacob)|Concerto for Horn and String Orchestra]]),<ref>Gamble, pp. 171–173.</ref> [[Mátyás Seiber]] (''Notturno'' for Horn and Strings), [[Humphrey Searle]] (''Aubade'' for Horn and Strings), [[Ernest Tomlinson]] (''Rhapsody and Rondo'' for Horn and Orchestra, ''Romance and Rondo'' for Horn and Orchestra), [[Lennox Berkeley]] ([[Trio for horn, violin, and piano (Berkeley)|Trio for Horn, Violin and Piano]]) and [[Elisabeth Lutyens]].
 
[[Francis Poulenc]] wrote ''Elegie for Horn and Piano'' to commemorate Brain's death. He happened to be in London when Brain was killed, and he wrote the Elegie the next day. It was premiered on 1 September 1958, exactly one year after Brain's death, by [[Neill Sanders]] and with Poulenc himself on piano.
 
To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of his death, a new work, ''Fanfare: a salute to Dennis Brain'' was commissioned from Sir [[Peter Maxwell Davies]], and premiered in Nottingham on 15 March 2007 by [[Michael Thompson (horn player)|Michael Thompson]]. Fifty horn players subscribed [[Pound sterling|£]]50 each towards this commission, underwritten by Windblowers of Nottingham.
 
===Revived works===
Brain collaborated with Karajan to produce recordings of the four Mozart horn concerti, works now considered to be the basis of the solo horn repertory. The concerti were originally written for [[Joseph Leutgeb]], a Viennese [[natural horn]] player. Evidence of Brain's skill at composition was shown when he composed the cadenzas for the first and third concerti for his recordings.
 
Brain also popularized the two [[Richard Strauss]] horn concerti. He was the third to perform the [[Horn Concerto No. 2 (Strauss)|Horn Concerto No. 2]] publicly with the Vienna Philharmonic in 1948.
 
In 1951, Brain became the first person in modern times to perform [[Joseph Haydn]]'s Horn Concerto No. 1.
 
==Erfenis==