Ludwig van Beethoven Trio in C major for Two Oboes and English Horn Op.87 1. Allegro 2. Adagio cantabile 3. Menuetto Allegro molto Scherzo 4. Finale Presto Heinz Holliger Oboe Hans Elhorst Oboe Maurice Bourgue English Horn
@@proarte4081 si lo sé digo, no es lo que estamos acostumbrados a escuchar de Beethoven es como su primera faceta como compositor con estilo muy clásico
@@sebastiansilva7940 Eso es cierto. Tal vez se llevó a la tumba muchas otras obras que lo declaraban como admirador de Mozart y Haydn, como la sonata para flauta.
It features two oboes, an English horn, and the notes written in the score. I don't know how it couldn't have as many high frequencies as are required?
"Brightness" is a function of timbre and overtones. There are geographical differences in what is considered the "best" oboe sound. This sounds ideal to some Europeans, but many Americans find Holliger et al.'s timbre too bright. Not that he isn't a wonderful musician--he is--but oboe sound is a matter of taste.
To me it seems strange to have a preference for oboes, rather than enjoy them all. Perhaps I'm too fond of each oboe I've heard from the late Baroque to the present day.
The difference is also the reed scrape itself, which is very different. I love German sounding oboes, but they play on different oboes than many Americans do. Most oboists I know play on Loree here. I play oboe as well as flute, but i didn't major in oboe because of reeds ;-) But i still love the oboe!