Home » *Top Pick*, Live Music, Online

“Honoring Beethoven’s 250th Birthday” Livestream Piano Concert

Dang! This event has already taken place.
>> Want to see our Top Picks for this week instead?
Friday, December 18, 2020 - 8:00 pm to 9:30 pm | Cost: $1*
*Donation Based! Support SF musicians! https://www.oldfirstconcerts.org/performance/daniel-glover-symphonies-and-concertos-without-orchestra-a-covid-compromise-friday-december-18-at-8-pm/

Old First Concerts | 1751 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, CA 94109

Buy Tickets

Honoring Beethoven’s 250th Birthday
Daniel Glover, piano

Daniel Glover will perform rare solo piano works which also exist(ed) as orchestral works. Since we currently have no chance to attend live orchestra concerts, this recital will remind us of what we have been missing. Performed in honor of Beethoven’s 250th birthday (December 16!) the program features works with a connection to Beethoven, including a newly discovered work by the master, only just found and published in Vienna this year! This is most likely an unverified West Coast premiere!

Muzio Clementi’s Sonata in G minor, Opus 34, No. 2 was alleged to have been a symphony, prior to this alternate version for piano solo. The original symphony has been lost. It obsessively uses the same rhythm as Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony, and many scholars speculate that it was Beethoven’s inspiration. It was composed in 1795 prior to Beethoven’s first three piano sonatas, Opus 2, and his Symphony No. 1.

Charles-Valentin Alkan’s masterly solo transcription of the first movement of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 3 seamlessly combines the orchestral and piano parts into an impressive whole. Although his hyper-virtuosic and inordinately lengthy original cadenza is a primary reason to hear the work, Daniel will instead play the neglected cadenza by the late Romantic American composer Amy Beach.

John Corigilano’s Fantasy on an Ostinato (1985) was commissioned as a competition piece for the seventh Van Cliburn Competition. It uses the obsessive rhythm and simple harmony of Beethoven’s iconic slow movement from his Seventh Symphony. The performer decides on the duration and number of repetitions of patterns played in this quasi-minimalistic/improvisatory work.

The concert will conclude with Liszt’s Fantasy on themes from Beethoven’s “Ruins of Athens.” The piece was first composed by Liszt as a work for piano and orchestra in 1852, and later as a piano solo, and also for two pianos. It utilizes three prominent themes from Beethoven’s incidental music to The Ruins of Athens, for vocal soloists, chorus and orchestra: the march, Chorus of Dervishes, and the much beloved Turkish March.

Muzio Clementi Sonata in G minor, Op. 34, No. 2
Beethoven-Alkan Concerto No. 3 in C minor, Op. 37, I Allegro con brio (cadenza by Amy Beach)
John Corigliano Fantasy on an Ostinato
Franz Liszt Fantasy on themes from Beethoven’s ‘Ruins of Athens’

Live Stream Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3aJ-RXi9M4&feature=youtu.be

Disclaimer: Please double check event information with the event organizer as events can be canceled, details can change after they are added to our calendar, and errors do occur.


Cost: $1*
*Donation Based! Support SF musicians! https://www.oldfirstconcerts.org/performance/daniel-glover-symphonies-and-concertos-without-orchestra-a-covid-compromise-friday-december-18-at-8-pm/
Categories: *Top Pick*, Live Music, Online
Venue: Old First Concerts
Address: 1751 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, CA 94109