About the composer: Nielsen, Carl (1865-1931) was a self-taught Danish composer, who first studied violin mostly on his own. He started out as a Romanticist who enjoyed the music of Grieg he then infused polytonality into his music long before it was used by others. About this work: Symphony No. 4 (1916), Opus 29. Often called “The Inextinguishable” referring to the fact that “music is life and like life, it is inextinguishable.” The work was intended to show the tenacity of the human spirit. This is one of the few works which is absolute music with no underlying program. For this reason it is often misunderstood. (ed). This performance by Frankfurt Radio Symphony (2013) was a faithful performance of the work and was enjoyable. Final note: This work requires adept timpani performance since it features many chromatic passages for eight pedal-timpani (2 performers). We felt the timpanists in this orchestra were excellent.
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