ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Maurice Ravel Work Title: Piano Concerto in G major Date of Composition: 1929–1931 Premiere: Paris, 1932 Genre: Concerto Structure: 3 movements (Allegramente – Adagio assai – Presto) Duration: approx. 20–23 minutes Instrumentation: Piano and orchestra ___________________________ There are works that seem to emerge from urgency, from an almost instinctive need to speak. And there are others that feel shaped by something very different — by restraint, by refinement, by a compositional intelligence that does not rush toward expression, but instead constructs it with precision . Maurice Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major belongs unmistakably to the latter. Written between 1929 and 1931, at a time when the composer’s health had already begun to deteriorate, the concerto does not reveal fragility. On the contrary, it presents a musical language of remarkable clarity — one in which every gesture appears measured, placed, and refined with deli...
Jean-Honoré Fragonard’s “The Chase” reflects the playful sense of surprise that made Haydn’s Symphony No. 94 instantly famous. ℹ️ Work Information Composer: Joseph Haydn Work: Symphony No. 94 in G major, “Surprise” Date of composition: 1791 Premiere: London, during Haydn’s first London visit Genre: Symphony Structure: Four movements (slow introduction – sonata form – variations – minuet – finale) Duration: approx. 20–25 minutes Instrumentation: Classical orchestra (strings, woodwinds, horns, trumpets, timpani) __________________________ There are works that become famous for a single moment — and then there are works in which that moment reveals something deeper about the way the music itself is constructed. Haydn’s Symphony No. 94 belongs unmistakably to the latter. Composed during his first London visit, at a time when his reputation had already reached its peak, the symphony does not attempt to impress through scale or dramatic excess. Instead, it demonstrates someth...