Listening to Beethoven's Late string quartets this afternoon, , I find they are very conducive to thought and here are a few random thoughts that seized me.
They are unbelievably beautiful in their melodic and chromatic variation and are almost a sort of a long farewell to the world as Beethoven sets sail for the blessed Isles. One feels the bitter sweet pain of the world that Beethoven felt, like the Einfuhlung that I referred to on previous posts in connection with the romantics. What Beethoven feels, you feel because you are at one with the universal mind past present and future that abides in eternity.
They are full of yearning for an unseen world. He was searching for the terra incognito of the human heart, its terrifying depths and Olympian heights.
He showed a sublimity and majesty of spirit in his late quartets, so astonishing no matter how often one hears them , there elemental greatness just seems to grow ever stronger and one can scarcely believe one is listening to such divine dialogue.
If the renaissance of mankind is to come, Beethoven will be its magician.
I get a marvellous feeling of great comfort and benison in Beethoven's music, he seems to have access to something lost to us now.
Words are inadequate to describe the overpowering emotion, but strongly disciplined emotion.
Beethoven understood and new there was a world we had lost (similar to what we have been discussing in another thread), and he returned to that theme again in his late string quartets. They are surely miracles.
What are our other correspondants thoughts on the late string qaurtets?.
[This message has been edited by Amalie (edited September 28, 2003).]
They are unbelievably beautiful in their melodic and chromatic variation and are almost a sort of a long farewell to the world as Beethoven sets sail for the blessed Isles. One feels the bitter sweet pain of the world that Beethoven felt, like the Einfuhlung that I referred to on previous posts in connection with the romantics. What Beethoven feels, you feel because you are at one with the universal mind past present and future that abides in eternity.
They are full of yearning for an unseen world. He was searching for the terra incognito of the human heart, its terrifying depths and Olympian heights.
He showed a sublimity and majesty of spirit in his late quartets, so astonishing no matter how often one hears them , there elemental greatness just seems to grow ever stronger and one can scarcely believe one is listening to such divine dialogue.
If the renaissance of mankind is to come, Beethoven will be its magician.
I get a marvellous feeling of great comfort and benison in Beethoven's music, he seems to have access to something lost to us now.
Words are inadequate to describe the overpowering emotion, but strongly disciplined emotion.
Beethoven understood and new there was a world we had lost (similar to what we have been discussing in another thread), and he returned to that theme again in his late string quartets. They are surely miracles.
What are our other correspondants thoughts on the late string qaurtets?.
[This message has been edited by Amalie (edited September 28, 2003).]
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