We've been discussing Beethoven's 5th in another topic and I heard two versions of it this week on the radio and thought I would pass along these two quotes:
Hector Berlioz talked a friend of his into going to a concert to hear Beethoven’s 5th in 1828. Afterwards he found his friend and asked him what he thought. His friend said, “O, let me get out. I must have some air. It’s amazing! Wonderful! I was so moved and so disturbed that when I came out of the box and tried to put on my hat I couldn’t find my head. Now let me be. We’ll meet tomorrow.” Then they met the next day and he said, “Music like that ought not to be written!” and Berlioz replied, “Don’t worry, Master, there’s not much danger of that.”
and
E. T. Hoffmann, German novelist and critic, wrote this review in 1810. He began with a comparison, “Joseph Haydn is music full of love and happiness,” but he added. “that you could listen for hours and find no suffering or pain.” And then there’s Mozart, “Mozart can envelope the listener in fear and give a premonition of the infinite but he can’t make you tremble to your very core. Beethoven’s 5th opens the realm of the colossal and immeasurable for us. Radiant beams shoot through the deep night of this region and we become aware of gigantic shadows rocking back and forth which close in on us and destroy all within us except the pain of endless longing.”
Powerful words for a powerful piece.
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'Truth and beauty joined'
Hector Berlioz talked a friend of his into going to a concert to hear Beethoven’s 5th in 1828. Afterwards he found his friend and asked him what he thought. His friend said, “O, let me get out. I must have some air. It’s amazing! Wonderful! I was so moved and so disturbed that when I came out of the box and tried to put on my hat I couldn’t find my head. Now let me be. We’ll meet tomorrow.” Then they met the next day and he said, “Music like that ought not to be written!” and Berlioz replied, “Don’t worry, Master, there’s not much danger of that.”
and
E. T. Hoffmann, German novelist and critic, wrote this review in 1810. He began with a comparison, “Joseph Haydn is music full of love and happiness,” but he added. “that you could listen for hours and find no suffering or pain.” And then there’s Mozart, “Mozart can envelope the listener in fear and give a premonition of the infinite but he can’t make you tremble to your very core. Beethoven’s 5th opens the realm of the colossal and immeasurable for us. Radiant beams shoot through the deep night of this region and we become aware of gigantic shadows rocking back and forth which close in on us and destroy all within us except the pain of endless longing.”
Powerful words for a powerful piece.
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'Truth and beauty joined'
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