Originally posted by v russo:
the fifth points forward to the future, the future of his own later period, the future of Freud and his discoveries and the implementation of these ideas in the music of the second vienesse school and the whole music of the 20th century,
the fifth points forward to the future, the future of his own later period, the future of Freud and his discoveries and the implementation of these ideas in the music of the second vienesse school and the whole music of the 20th century,
Why is modern classical music always derelict? I asked my self this question after noting that members of this forum (including me!) are concerned only with the classical and baroque eras, sometimes overstepping to the romantic era, but what about Debussy, Schoenberg,Stravinsky, Messian, De Falla,....?
Yesterday I attended a piano concert organized in cooperation with the Spanish embassy in my country, the pianist name was Claudio Carbo Montaner.The concert program was: "The Spanish music over the last century". It included piano pieces by contemporary composers such as Antonio Garcia Abril, Zulema de la Cruz. In addition, the program included pieces of who are named "Classical" Spanish composers including Isaac Albeniz and Manuel de Falla and others who lived in both the 19th and 20th centuries...
It was not the first time that I listen to modern classical music, as I have some listening experiment with some impressionist composers (Debussy and Ravel) and a few pieces written in atonality style, but it's really a new world of music worthy of putting into concern that I haven't discovered completely yet.
Of course I didn't understand Abril and Cruz pieces as I do with Beethoven's or Chopin's, but indeed I was amazed about this very modern style that have its new way to express the human soul...It wasn't odd and bothersome music (as many would describe
it), it's really something new and fascinating...
It's an invitation here for every member of this forum to explore the modern classical music, and remember, the great Mozart that we know today was considered a musician of the 2nd or 3rd grade in his lifetime!
[This message has been edited by Ahmad (edited February 16, 2004).]
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