Self Confidence or Modesty
Johannes Brahms (1833 - 1897)
- German composer, one of the major composers of the 19th century, whose works combine the best of the classical
and romantic schools. Brahms was born in Hamburg on May 7, 1833. After studying the violin and cello with his father, a double-bass player
in the city theater, Brahms mastered the piano and began to compose under the guidance of the German music
teacher Eduard Marxsen, whose conservative tastes left a lasting imprint on him. In 1853 Brahms went on a concert
tour as accompanist to the Hungarian violinist Eduard Reményi. In the course of the tour he met the Hungarian
violinist Joseph Joachim, who introduced him in turn to the German composer Robert Schumann.
Schumann was so impressed by Brahms's unpublished compositions that he wrote a wildly enthusiastic magazine
article about him. Brahms cherished a deep affection for both Schumann and his wife Clara, a famous pianist. The
friendship and encouragement he received from them gave impetus to his work. Many biographers contend that
Brahms was deeply in love with Clara, but he did not propose to her after Schumann's death in 1856, and he never
married.
Early Works
- In 1857 Brahms secured appointment as conductor at the court theater in Detmold, where he remained until 1859; for
several years thereafter he traveled in Germany and Switzerland. His first major work to be publicly presented was
the Piano Concerto no. 1 in D Minor, which he performed in Leipzig in 1859. The composition was not well received,
however, because it lacked the showiness and the virtuoso passages then in vogue. The composer went to Vienna
in 1863 and became director of the Singakademie (Choral Academy) but left the post a year later.
In 1868 Brahms won fame throughout Europe following the performance of his German Requiem, in which he
departed from Catholic tradition by using a German rather than a Latin text. The piece, cast in seven divisions,
expresses his sorrow at the death of his mother and of Schumann. Brahms settled in Vienna in 1871, accepting
the directorship of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde (Society of Friends of Music). In 1874 he resigned his position
to devote himself to composing.
Major Works
- Until 1873 Brahms had written chiefly for the piano, the instrument he knew best, and for chorus and orchestra.
In that year, however, he produced the Variations on a Theme by Haydn, scored for full orchestra. Demonstrating
Brahms's increasing mastery of large orchestral form, the Variations presaged his major works, which are among
the finest expressions in all music literature. His masterpieces include the grandiloquent Symphony no. 1 in
C Minor (1876); the gentler, more mellifluous Symphony no. 2 in D Major (1877); the Academic Festival Overture
(1880), incorporating German student songs; the somber Tragic Overture (1881); the poetic Symphony no. 3 in
F Major (1883); and the Symphony no. 4 in E Minor (1885), with its brilliant and emotionally overwhelming finale.
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All these works display a tightly knit structure, stemming from the Viennese classical tradition. Unlike his
contemporaries, Brahms shunned exploitation of new harmonic effects and new tone colors for their own sake.
He concerned himself rather with creating music of inherent unity, utilizing new or unusual effects only to enhance
internal structural nuances. Thus, his best works contain no extraneous passages; each theme, each figure, each
modulation is implicit in all that has preceded it. The classicism of Brahms was a unique phenomenon in its day,
entirely at odds with the trends in contemporary music as represented especially by the German composer Richard
Wagner. Although Brahms revived a tradition to which no important composer since Ludwig van Beethoven had
adhered, he was not wholly isolated from his own milieu, and the fiery emotional range of the romantic spirit
permeates his music.
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Unfortunately, little is known of Brahms's methods of work. A merciless self-critic, he burned all that he wrote before
the age of 19 as well as some sketches of later masterpieces. It is known that he frequently reworked pieces over a
period of 10 to 20 years, and before achieving the final form he often transcribed them for several different
combinations of instruments.
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Brahms wrote in every medium except opera. His numerous other important works include Schicksalslied (Song of
Destiny, 1871), a musical setting of a poem by the German poet Friedrich Hölderlin, scored for chorus and orchestra;
the Violin Concerto in D Major (1878), a classic in the violin repertoire; 3 string quartets; 5 trios; a clarinet quintet;
numerous other chamber works for various combinations of instruments; and more than 150 songs. Brahms died on
April 13, 1897, in Vienna.
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"Brahms, Johannes," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk &
Wagnall's Corporation.
 
No one in the poverty-stricken districts of Hamburg would have believed that little "Hannes" would grow up to be a famous composer. Brahms at the age of thirteen was earning fifty cents a night playing waltzes for the sailors and their girls in Hamburg's lowest dives. By the age of fifteen he was giving serious piano recitals.
It took Brahms twenty years before he completed his own first symphony in 1876. Forever aware of Beethoven's monumental shadow; his first symphony sounded to critics so similiar to Beethoven's works that it was dubbed "Beethoven's Tenth". Although Brahms always felt inferior to Beethoven, he actually excelled Beethoven in writing
music for voices. One of his most famous works, "A German Requiem, Op. 45" (1868), was written in memory of his
friend and fellow musician Robert Alexander Schumann.
By the end of his life, Brahms had won a reputation on par with the greatest composers in history, giving rise to the
phrase "the three B's" - Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. He was more modest than some about his own accomplishments; once, when the daughter of Johann Strauss asked for his autograph, he wrote the opening bars of Strauss' Blue Danube Waltz on her paper and scrawled below it, "Not, alas, by Johannes Brahms."
He remained a bachelor all his life and though he had a large circle of friends, he had a reputation for being disagreeable, gruff and ill-tempered at times. Johannes Brahms' tastes and habits were simple. He smoked black
cigars and brewed his black coffee.
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