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The stature of Johannes Brahms among classical composers is well
illustrated by his inclusion among the "Three Bs" triumvirate of Bach,
Beethoven, and Brahms. Of all the major composers of the late Romantic
era, Brahms was the one most attached to the Classical ideal as manifested
in the music of Haydn, Mozart, and especially Beethoven; indeed, Hans von
Bülow once characterized Brahms' Symphony No. 1 (1855-76) as "Beethoven's
Tenth." As a youth Brahms was championed by Robert Schumann as music's
greatest hope for the future; as a mature composer, Brahms became for
conservative musical journalists the most potent symbol of musical
tradition, a stalwart against the "degeneration" represented by the music
of Wagner and his school. Brahms' symphonies, choral and vocal works,
chamber music, and piano pieces are imbued with strong emotional feeling,
yet take shape according to a thoroughly considered structural plan. The
son of a double bassist in the Hamburg Philharmonic Society, Brahms
demonstrated great promise from the beginning. He began his musical career
as a pianist, contributing to the family coffers as a teenager by playing
in restaurants, taverns, and even brothels. Though by his early twenties
he enjoyed associations with luminaries like violinists Eduard Reményi
and Joseph Joachim, the friend and mentor who was most instrumental in
advancing his career was Schumann, who all but adopted him and became his
most ardent partisan, and their esteem was mutual. Following Schumann's
death in 1856, Brahms became the closest confidant and lifelong friend of
the composer's widow, pianist and composer Clara Wieck Schumann. After a
life of spectacular musical triumphs and failed loves (the composer was
involved in several romantic entanglements but never wed), Brahms died of
liver cancer on April 3, 1897. In every genre in which he composed, Brahms
produced works that have become staples of the repertory. His most
ambitious work, the German Requiem (1863-67), is the composer's singular
reinterpretation of an age-old form. The four symphonies -- lushly scored,
grand in scope, and deeply expressive -- are cornerstones of the symphonic
literature. Brahms' concertos are, similarly, in a monumental,
quasi-symphonic vein: the two piano concertos (1856-59 and 1881) and the
Violin Concerto (1878) call for soloists with both considerable technical
skill and stamina. His chamber music is among the most sophisticated and
exquisitely crafted of the Romantic era; for but a single example, his
works that incorporate the clarinet (e.g. the Trio in A minor, Op. 114 and
the two Sonatas, Op. 120), an instrument largely overlooked by his
contemporaries, remain unsurpassed. Though the piano sonata never held for
Brahms the same appeal it had for Beethoven (Brahms wrote three to
Beethoven's 32), he produced a voluminous body of music for the piano. He
showed a particular affinity for variations -- notably, on themes of
Schumann (1854), Handel (1861), and Paganini (1862-63) -- and likewise
produced a passel of national dances and character pieces such as
ballades, intermezzi, and rhapsodies. Collectively, these constitute one
of the essential bodies of work in the realm of nineteenth century
keyboard music. ~ AMG, All Music Guide