I was thinking tonight while I was listening to some of the more ancient music, particularly some of Monteverdi's madrigals, and it seemed that classical music turned away from a primary focus of spirituality, into something else. I am probably wrong.
I mean, when I listen to the ancient composers of the Renaissance and Baroque a lot of the focus seems to be on spirituality. Although, when I listen to the Romantics I do not think this as much? Perhaps the great composers of ancient times deeply concentrated on spirituality through music?
It seems to have ended with Bach, and then been brought back by Beethoven. After Beethoven, there doesn't seem to be a deep focus on spirituality. I know that the Classical, Romantic, Contemporary, etc., composers wrote Requiem Masses and things of that nature, it is just that it seems there isn't the spirituality of Beethoven, Bach, Byrd, Monteverdi, etc., (don't know to many, ).
Not to speak of most of the music today, after listening to it, I think the world has turned into some unimaginable nonspiritual environment, for the most part.
Anyway, this is just a thought.
I mean, when I listen to the ancient composers of the Renaissance and Baroque a lot of the focus seems to be on spirituality. Although, when I listen to the Romantics I do not think this as much? Perhaps the great composers of ancient times deeply concentrated on spirituality through music?
It seems to have ended with Bach, and then been brought back by Beethoven. After Beethoven, there doesn't seem to be a deep focus on spirituality. I know that the Classical, Romantic, Contemporary, etc., composers wrote Requiem Masses and things of that nature, it is just that it seems there isn't the spirituality of Beethoven, Bach, Byrd, Monteverdi, etc., (don't know to many, ).
Not to speak of most of the music today, after listening to it, I think the world has turned into some unimaginable nonspiritual environment, for the most part.
Anyway, this is just a thought.
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