Originally posted by Rod:
This is not redundant discussion, saying nothing but 'I love this, I love that' is redundant discussion, it is not even discussion. Upon a most wecome prompt I explained my position which is more than you usually get here. Without friction there is no birth, we just sit around like a bunch of mindless morons regurgitating the same crap like you get in the music academies. Do not try to stifle me Mr Rutradelusasa unless you have something more interesting to entertain us, this place has become way too mundane as it is and the moderators are conspicuous by their absence these days. I invite you to contradict the points I make above, starting with my using Beethoven as the quality standard, then my points about Bach.
This is not redundant discussion, saying nothing but 'I love this, I love that' is redundant discussion, it is not even discussion. Upon a most wecome prompt I explained my position which is more than you usually get here. Without friction there is no birth, we just sit around like a bunch of mindless morons regurgitating the same crap like you get in the music academies. Do not try to stifle me Mr Rutradelusasa unless you have something more interesting to entertain us, this place has become way too mundane as it is and the moderators are conspicuous by their absence these days. I invite you to contradict the points I make above, starting with my using Beethoven as the quality standard, then my points about Bach.
If I must say, I say not even Beethoven could have written the beggining of the St. Matthew's Passion and not even Bach could have written the Missa Solemnis.
Each time I return to Händel I find the same pleasant tunes in new outfits across his ouvre. To be honest, after the cd has stopped or the applause has died, I carry much less of Händel with me than I do with Bach.
The two composers able to make me marvel at something, that have ever gotten a "wow" coming out of my mouth were Beethoven and Bach.
They are the standarts I set for everything else. I measure Händel by Bach. I measure Brahms by Beethoven. I measure Music by them. They are Music to me, the others are composers.
I have NEVER found, and you will never be able to show me, another piece of music with the cumulative effect of the "et in terra pax" from the B minor mass. I searched all the Händel I could handle till I couldn't listen anymore to him. I got myself a little cleansing-period with some toccatas from Bach.
You want dramatic? Have you really gotten to the "Sind Blitzer, sind Donner im Wolke verschwunden" chorus in the St. Matthew Passion?
Or are you going to tell me that all those recitativs between "I stand here and sing a lot" arias in Händel's operas are dramatic? Not even big Händel champions stand to not cut some of that in order to have SOME action in certain operas. Want action? Get inside a trash can and roll yourself down the hill.
Now, that's my opinion. Do you want to bet that after the many posts this topic might have (and don't post the "Beethoven thought Händel was the greatest" mumbo-jumbo bs because my monitor won't survive the punch) and all the posts and topics this forum has had you won't change your mind?
There's 50 bucks in it.
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"Wer ein holdes weib errugen..."
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