This release, part of harmonia mundi's series celebrating the Beethoven year, pairs the composer's iconic and much-loved Symphony No.5 with the far less well-known Symphony In 17 Parts by Francois-Joseph Gossec. The dramatic power and intensity of Beethoven stands in sharp contrast to to the cheerful and gallant music of Gossec. Les Siècles, led by François-Xavier Roth, apply their usual virtuosity and keen insight to both works in performances that are sure to delight.
This release, part of harmonia mundi's series celebrating the Beethoven year, pairs the composer's iconic and much-loved Symphony No.5 with the far less well-known Symphony In 17 Parts by Francois-Joseph Gossec. The dramatic power and intensity of Beethoven stands in sharp contrast to to the cheerful and gallant music of Gossec. Les Siècles, led by François-Xavier Roth, apply their usual virtuosity and keen insight to both works in performances that are sure to delight.
« Un jour, je devins journaliste par désespoir, devant l’incapacité de toutes les professions à me satisfaire », déclare Joseph Roth (1894-1939). Connu pour son œuvre romanesque, il a pourtant dès 1919, une importante activité de chroniqueur dans les grands titres de la presse de langue allemande. Il parcourt l’Europe et brosse, dans de courts articles, des portraits saisissants de lieux (gare, frontière, trains, hôtels, cabarets, mines de charbon…), de personnages (voyageurs, bureaucrates, promeneurs, malfrats, nazis, juifs émigrés…) et de villes (Berlin, Leipzig, Vienne, Dortmund, Prague, Paris…).