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Which work `did it` for you?

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    #31
    My first recollection of Beethoven is the Pastoral Symphony movement in Disney's 'Fantasia' which I heard when, as a birthday present, I was taken to see the movie on 15 January 1943.

    My Beethoven catalyst work was the Violin Concerto. When I was coming out of my "popular classics' Warsaw Concerto - Coronation Scot - phase, my ears were not attuned to Beethoven.

    I was told that Beethoven's Violin Concerto was the best of all violin concertos so I made up my mind to get stuck into it and I played it repeatedly. A bit here sounded ok and a bit there, too. Gradually the bits joined up until it became one long glorious song.

    The first non-universally famous work to `grab` me was 6 Variations on 'Nel cor piu non mi sento' from Paisiello's 'La molinara', for piano in G major, WoO 70.

    The background story to its composition is delightful (I can't recall the source I read umpteen years ago so I may not have it exact). Beethoven went to the opera 'La molinara' and while there a lady told him that she had lost a piano setting of the opera's best aria 'Nel cor piu non mi sento'. That very night, Beethoven wrote his 6 variations on the aria and presented it to the lady the next morning.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0699bczcS0

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      #32
      My first recollection of Beethoven is the Pastoral Symphony movement in Disney's 'Fantasia' which I heard when, as a birthday present, I was taken to see the movie on 15 January 1943.
      You know i have had a feeling for awhile now that I heard his Pastorale as a child, but noone in my family listened to classical..maybe it was this Disney I saw on TV...and that's whre the vague memory of hearing it in childhood comes from.



      My Beethoven catalyst work was the Violin Concerto. When I was coming out of my "popular classics' Warsaw Concerto - Coronation Scot - phase, my ears were not attuned to Beethoven.

      I was told that Beethoven's Violin Concerto was the best of all violin concertos so I made up my mind to get stuck into it and I played it repeatedly. A bit here sounded ok and a bit there, too. Gradually the bits joined up until it became one long glorious song.
      I was listening to this yesterday..it's divine!


      The first non-universally famous work to `grab` me was 6 Variations on 'Nel cor piu non mi sento' from Paisiello's 'La molinara', for piano in G major, WoO 70.

      The background story to its composition is delightful (I can't recall the source I read umpteen years ago so I may not have it exact). Beethoven went to the opera 'La molinara' and while there a lady told him that she had lost a piano setting of the opera's best aria 'Nel cor piu non mi sento'. That very night, Beethoven wrote his 6 variations on the aria and presented it to the lady the next morning.
      Awww how sweet of him!
      Ludwig van Beethoven
      Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
      Doch nicht vergessen sollten

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        #33
        To me it was, has been, is and always will be the 5th. I think that the transition between movement 3 & 4, while just a repetition for 15 bars or so, then exploding into this majestic theme of the last movement, it is so quintessential Beethoven, I never can just hear it and not stop what I am doing. And believe me, I've heard it many, many times and have many versions of it.

        Once I got to know his music better, I think it was the Piano Sonatas that did it for me, as well. I may have some preferred one's (the Arietta of his last Sonata has recently struck a chord even more than it already had), but there are very few of those that do not meet the sublime standard this man has set for himself. Moreover, I believe that in the Sonatas, one can hear best how he evolved from his early days to the 'last period'.

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          #34
          Yes the sonatas are like a journey in a way. I just love them all; they all have something special.
          Ludwig van Beethoven
          Den Sie wenn Sie wollten
          Doch nicht vergessen sollten

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            #35
            Originally posted by PDG View Post
            To make it more interesting, how about nominating the 1st non-universally famous work to `grab` you? For me, it was an old, dusty, neglected LP of the Original Piano Variations, op.34. I found this piece to be so marvellously novel, with its shift of key for each successive variation, and so brilliantly tuneful, that even now I prefer it to the Diabelli set.
            If I may quote myself from precisely 4,778 days ago -

            There were other great works on that neglected LP. The unused allegretto of the C minor Op.10 sonata, the 6 Ecossaises WoO.83, the two Rondos, Op.51, the original theme and 32 variations in C minor. All underrated gems...

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              #36
              Originally posted by PDG View Post
              If I may quote myself from precisely 4,778 days ago -

              ...
              Good Heavens, PDG! I thought you had gone the way of John Cleese's parrot!

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                #37
                Originally posted by Michael View Post
                Good Heavens, PDG! I thought you had gone the way of John Cleese's parrot!
                But it's not dead!

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                  #38
                  Originally posted by Sorrano View Post
                  But it's not dead!
                  I know a dead parrot when I see one!

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                    #39
                    Originally posted by Michael View Post
                    I know a dead parrot when I see one!
                    It's just sleeping.

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                      #40
                      Or pining for the fjords.

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                        #41
                        Originally posted by Michael View Post
                        Good Heavens, PDG! I thought you had gone the way of John Cleese's parrot!
                        You should know me by now, Michael - I tend to hibernate for about 11 months a year...

                        I hope all is well with you.

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                          #42
                          Originally posted by PDG View Post
                          You should know me by now, Michael - I tend to hibernate for about 11 months a year...

                          I hope all is well with you.
                          Likewise.

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