Originally posted by Uniqor:
I see old topics, I see old names...
I'll just concentrate on the late work: for me, many of them sound radiculas. I have no intention od telling myself that I'm totally wrong, nor forcing myself to read a stack of books which would "enlight" me. When beethoven knocked so hard on those disscordant chords out of the middle of a silence in his last sonata, I almost spilled my coffee out... So really, life is to short to become "musically intellegent" - 1. because there are so many other work which you like the very first time you listen, and when you listen, you just listen; 2. because when intellegent comes to a certain degree, it's just abtrusive, which is really, another word for dumb. Again, I don't care which professer reckons the Hammerklavier is the "ultimate", "miracle" or "fantastick", I stick to the pleasure of the most - the beauty of Fur Elise. I consider living a qualitier life when enjoying Fur Elise, than busting my head, working off my sweat, trying to appreiciate the 50 minutes long Hammerklavier in full.
Peace...
I see old topics, I see old names...
I'll just concentrate on the late work: for me, many of them sound radiculas. I have no intention od telling myself that I'm totally wrong, nor forcing myself to read a stack of books which would "enlight" me. When beethoven knocked so hard on those disscordant chords out of the middle of a silence in his last sonata, I almost spilled my coffee out... So really, life is to short to become "musically intellegent" - 1. because there are so many other work which you like the very first time you listen, and when you listen, you just listen; 2. because when intellegent comes to a certain degree, it's just abtrusive, which is really, another word for dumb. Again, I don't care which professer reckons the Hammerklavier is the "ultimate", "miracle" or "fantastick", I stick to the pleasure of the most - the beauty of Fur Elise. I consider living a qualitier life when enjoying Fur Elise, than busting my head, working off my sweat, trying to appreiciate the 50 minutes long Hammerklavier in full.
Peace...
Music that doesn't necessarily appeal instantly, with perserverance can offer greater rewards. I'm not certain if it was Cherubini, but an eminent musician of the time for years regarded Beethoven's 5th as dreadful, only to say how wrong he had been in later years.
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'Man know thyself'
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